Crucial note: Notice that Nosotros looks identical in the past and present for -AR verbs (Hablamos = we speak / we spoke). Context solves the mystery. The easiest tense to form in Spanish. Why? You don’t remove the ending. You simply add the future endings to the full infinitive .
Pattern: -AR = -aba; -ER/-IR = -ía. "The would" tense. Like the future, you keep the full infinitive and add these endings: -ía, -ías, -ía, -íamos, -íais, -ían. tabla verbos regulares español
| -AR (Action) | -ER (Process) | -IR (Change/State) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | (to arrive) | Comprender (to understand) | Decidir (to decide) | | Mirar (to look at) | Correr (to run) | Describir (to describe) | | Preguntar (to ask) | Leer (to read) | Recibir (to receive) | | Tomar (to take/drink) | Prometer (to promise) | Subir (to go up/upload) | | Viajar (to travel) | Romper (to break) | Unir (to unite) | Crucial note: Notice that Nosotros looks identical in
A musician practices scales not to perform them, but to forget them during the solo. Similarly, the student memorizes the tabla to eventually abandon it—to speak comeré (I will eat) without calculating the ending. Many intermediate learners struggle not with rare irregulars, but with the stress accent of regular verbs. For example, confusing hablo (I speak) with habló (he spoke). A solid tabla teaches the eye and ear to hear the difference. The accent mark on the él/ella/usted form of the preterite is the regular verb's signature flourish. Part V: Beyond the Table – The Living List A tabla is useless without verbs to put in it. Here is your starter kit of high-frequency regular verbs to practice daily. Pattern: -AR = -aba; -ER/-IR = -ía