yo me lastimé tú te lastimaste usted, él, ella se lastimó nosotros nos lastimamos vosotros os lastimasteis ustedes, ellos, ellas se lastimaron
Past tense.
pidió
servimos
competí, competiste, competió, competemos, competisteis, competieron
Aumentado - participle, adjective. aumento - preterite aumentaba - imperfect
Hurt= "Lastimarse" Hurt self= "Autolastimarse"; another option could be "lastimarse a uno/si mismo." Hope this helps...
Here is the preterit of 'dar' in Spanish. di diste dio ----------------- dimos disteis / dieron dieron
Present: hay Imperfect: había Preterite: hubo Future: habrá Conditional: habría Subjunctive: haya Past Subjunctive: hubiera
Past tense.
pidió
You need to know the preterite tense if you are talking to someone about your past. However, there are two past tenses: the preterite and the imperfect. For a short description, the preterite is used when something is done and over with. The imperfect is for stuff that continously happened in the past. For example: If you lived on State street for five years, you would use the imperfect. If you said, I played basketball with my friends (yesterday) then you would use the preterite. Look for keys words in a sentence to know which tense to use such as yesterday, always, etc.
saber
servimos
Some verbs that have a stem change from "a" to "u" in the preterite tense in Spanish include "jugar" (to play), "poder" (to be able to), and "dormir" (to sleep).
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.
competí, competiste, competió, competemos, competisteis, competieron
It's another way of referring to the past tense.