For the preterite form, you just need to learn the endings for -ar verbs, -er and -ir verbs.
for example: hablar: hablé hablaste habló hablamos hablasteis hablaron both -er and -ir verbs have the same endings in the preterite comer comí comiste comió comimos comisteis comieron abrir abrí abriste abrió abrimos abristeis abrieron
Yes, the preterite tense is used to describe completed actions in the past, including how someone looked at a specific moment in the past. For example, "She wore a red dress" would be "Ella llevó un vestido rojo" in Spanish using the preterite tense.
We don't use the name imperfect tense in English. The imperfect is a verb form, found in various languages, which combines past tense and imperfective aspect. It can therefore have meanings similar to the English "was walking" or "used to walk."In English we use past continuous to show an action that happened during the time another longer action was happening egI was walking to work and I tripped on the curb. -- The 'longer' action is was walking, the action that interrupted the longer action is tripped which is past simple
That would be future tense.
"What language did you speak?" is past tense. Did is the past tense of do.
It's the past perfect continuous tense.
The past tense is heard.
usedIn simple past tense, you would say, "I used a computer last week."
Creating is a verb.
The present tense of used is:I/You/We/They use.He/She/It uses.The present participle is using.
You use don't or doesn't at the beginning of the sentence and then build the rest of the sentence as it was a positive sentence so the object first and the verb (with no endings) second. For example: Don't you go to the cinema? Doesn't he learn Spanish?
in a past tense sentence.
Yes.Did is used to make past simple questions then the verb is in the base form but it is not next to did.Where did you go last night? What did they eat? What did Jon say?The same applies to yes/no questions using did.Did you go to the beach? Did Jon phone you? Did my mother send you an email?