A2 verbs 5分で読める

Regular -er Verbs in Preterite

Regular -er verbs in the preterite describe completed past actions by swapping the ending for -i, -eu, -emos, or -eram.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Use for finished, one-time actions in the past.
  • Remove -er and add: -i, -eu, -emos, -eram.
  • The 'nós' form is identical to the present tense.
  • Perfect for specific time markers like 'ontem' or 'ano passado'.

Quick Reference

Subject Ending Example (Comer) English Translation
Eu -i comi I ate
Você / Ele / Ela -eu comeu You / He / She ate
Nós -emos comemos We ate
Vocês / Eles / Elas -eram comeram You all / They ate

主な例文

3 / 10
1

Eu comi uma maçã ontem.

I ate an apple yesterday.

2

Você bebeu toda a água?

Did you drink all the water?

3

Nós vendemos a casa na semana passada.

We sold the house last week.

💡

The 'Nós' Twin

Don't sweat the 'nós' form. It's the same in present and past. Use words like 'ontem' to clarify.

⚠️

The -ar Trap

New learners often say 'eu comei' instead of 'eu comi'. Remember: -er verbs love the letter 'i' in the first person past!

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Use for finished, one-time actions in the past.
  • Remove -er and add: -i, -eu, -emos, -eram.
  • The 'nós' form is identical to the present tense.
  • Perfect for specific time markers like 'ontem' or 'ano passado'.

Overview

Welcome to your new favorite past tense. The Pretérito Perfeito is the storyteller's best friend. You use it to talk about finished actions. Think of it as a snapshot in time. It captures things that started and ended. Did you eat a sandwich? Did you sell your car? Did you learn a new song? This is the grammar you need. It is simple, logical, and very common. In Portuguese, -er verbs follow a very steady rhythm. Once you learn the pattern, you unlock hundreds of words. It is like finding the master key to a hotel. You can suddenly open every door on the floor. Let's dive into the world of completed actions. You will be telling stories in no time.

How This Grammar Works

Portuguese verbs are like LEGO sets. They have a base part called a stem. They also have a tail called an ending. For regular -er verbs, the stem stays the same. Only the tail changes to show who did the action. It also shows that the action is finished. This tense is very specific. It does not care about habits. It only cares about results. If you did it once, this is your tense. If you finished it, this is your tense. It is like checking an item off a list. Done. Finished. Over. You just swap the -er for a new ending. It is a quick and clean process. Even native speakers love how predictable these verbs are.

Formation Pattern

  1. 1Ready to build some verbs? Follow these simple steps.
  2. 2Start with the infinitive verb like comer (to eat).
  3. 3Remove the -er from the end.
  4. 4You are left with the stem com-.
  5. 5Now, add the specific preterite endings.
  6. 6Here are the endings you need to memorize:
  7. 7For eu (I), add -i. Result: comi.
  8. 8For você/ele/ela (you/he/she), add -eu. Result: comeu.
  9. 9For nós (we), add -emos. Result: comemos.
  10. 10For vocês/eles/elas (you all/they), add -eram. Result: comeram.
  11. 11Wait, did you notice something? The nós form is the same as the present tense! Yes, nós comemos means both "we eat" and "we ate." Do not panic. Context will always tell you the truth. If you say "yesterday," people know it is the past. It is like a grammar two-for-one deal. Who doesn't love a bargain?

When To Use It

Use this tense for completed actions in the past. It is perfect for specific moments. Think of it as a single point on a timeline.

  • Use it with specific times: ontem (yesterday) or às cinco horas (at five o'clock).
  • Use it for a sequence of events. "I woke up, I bebi (drank) coffee, and I comi (ate) breakfast."
  • Use it for actions that happened once. "I vendi (sold) my house last year."
  • Use it in job interviews. "I aprendi (learned) many skills at my last job."
  • Use it when ordering food. "I escolhi (chose) the fish."

It is the "action" tense. It moves your story forward. Without it, your stories would just be descriptions. With it, things actually happen. It is the engine of your Portuguese conversation.

When Not To Use It

Do not use this for habits. If you ate pizza every day, use a different tense. The Pretérito Perfeito is not for "used to." It is also not for descriptions of the past. If you want to say the weather was nice, stop. This tense is for what you *did*, not how things *were*. Think of it like a camera flash. It captures one moment, not the whole movie. If the action is still happening, stay away. This tense is only for things that are 100% done. If there is a lingering connection to now, be careful. But usually, if it is over, you are safe here.

Common Mistakes

Many people mix up -ar and -er endings. For eu, -ar verbs use -ei. But -er verbs use -i. Do not say eu comei. That sounds like a strange new language. Another trap is the você form. People often want to use the present tense ending. Remember, it is comeu, not come. If you say ele come, you mean he eats right now. If you say ele comeu, he is already full. Also, watch the spelling of the eles form. It ends in -eram. Some people write -erão. But -erão is for the future! Do not send your friends to the future by mistake. Keep them in the past with -eram.

Contrast With Similar Patterns

Let's compare this to the Pretérito Imperfeito. The Perfeito is a dot. The Imperfeito is a line.

  • Perfeito: Eu comi (I ate - one time).
  • Imperfeito: Eu comia (I used to eat - many times).

It is the difference between a snapshot and a video. Also, compare it to -ar verbs.

  • -ar: Eu falei (I spoke).
  • -er: Eu comi (I ate).

Notice the i vs ei difference. It is a small change but very important. Think of it like a grammar traffic light. Red means stop and check your endings. Green means you are ready to speak fluently.

Quick FAQ

Q. Is beber a regular verb?

A. Yes, it follows the pattern perfectly. Eu bebi, você bebeu.

Q. What about the verb fazer?

A. No, fazer is a rebel. It is irregular. Stick to verbs like vender or correr first.

Q. Does this work in Portugal and Brazil?

A. Yes! The endings are the same in both places.

Q. How do I pronounce -eram?

A. It sounds like a soft "ay-rah-oo." The stress is on the middle syllable.

Q. Can I use this for "I have eaten"?

A. Often, yes. Portuguese uses this tense where English uses "have done."

Reference Table

Subject Ending Example (Comer) English Translation
Eu -i comi I ate
Você / Ele / Ela -eu comeu You / He / She ate
Nós -emos comemos We ate
Vocês / Eles / Elas -eram comeram You all / They ate
💡

The 'Nós' Twin

Don't sweat the 'nós' form. It's the same in present and past. Use words like 'ontem' to clarify.

⚠️

The -ar Trap

New learners often say 'eu comei' instead of 'eu comi'. Remember: -er verbs love the letter 'i' in the first person past!

🎯

Spelling Matters

Make sure to use -eram for the past. If you use -erão, you're accidentally talking about the future!

💬

Ordering Food

When a waiter asks if you liked the food, use this tense: 'Eu comi tudo!' (I ate everything!)

例文

10
#1 Eu comi uma maçã ontem.

Eu comi uma maçã ontem.

Focus: comi

I ate an apple yesterday.

Basic usage with a specific time marker.

#2 Você bebeu toda a água?

Você bebeu toda a água?

Focus: bebeu

Did you drink all the water?

A completed action in question form.

#3 Nós vendemos a casa na semana passada.

Nós vendemos a casa na semana passada.

Focus: vendemos

We sold the house last week.

Note that 'vendemos' looks like the present tense.

#4 Eles aprenderam português rápido.

Eles aprenderam português rápido.

Focus: aprenderam

They learned Portuguese quickly.

Focus on the plural ending -eram.

#5 ✗ Eu comei o bolo. → ✓ Eu comi o bolo.

Eu comi o bolo.

Focus: comi

I ate the cake.

Don't use -ar endings for -er verbs.

#6 ✗ Eles comerão ontem. → ✓ Eles comeram ontem.

Eles comeram ontem.

Focus: comeram

They ate yesterday.

-erão is future; -eram is past.

#7 O senhor entendeu a explicação?

O senhor entendeu a explicação?

Focus: entendeu

Did you (formal) understand the explanation?

Formal address uses the same ending as ele/ela.

#8 Eu não respondi ao e-mail ainda.

Eu não respondi ao e-mail ainda.

Focus: respondi

I haven't responded to the email yet.

Negative sentences just add 'não' before the verb.

#9 Assim que ela correu, sentiu-se melhor.

Assim que ela correu, sentiu-se melhor.

Focus: correu

As soon as she ran, she felt better.

Advanced: Using two past verbs in one sequence.

#10 Nós escrevemos o relatório ontem à noite.

Nós escrevemos o relatório ontem à noite.

Focus: escrevemos

We wrote the report last night.

Escrever is a common regular -er verb.

自分をテスト

Complete the sentence with the correct form of 'beber' in the preterite.

Ontem, eu ___ um suco de laranja.

✓ 正解! ✗ おしい! 正解: bebi

For 'eu', the regular -er preterite ending is -i.

Choose the correct verb form for 'eles'.

Eles ___ muito na maratona.

✓ 正解! ✗ おしい! 正解: correram

The plural third-person ending for -er verbs in the past is -eram.

Select the correct form of 'entender'.

Você ___ o que eu disse?

✓ 正解! ✗ おしい! 正解: entendeu

The 'você' form uses the -eu ending in the preterite.

🎉 スコア: /3

ビジュアル学習ツール

Present vs. Preterite

Presente (Now)
Eu como I eat
Ele bebe He drinks
Pretérito (Then)
Eu comi I ate
Ele bebeu He drank

How to Conjugate -er Verbs

1

Is the verb regular and ends in -er?

YES ↓
NO
Stop! Check irregular list.
2

Drop the -er. Do you have the stem?

YES ↓
NO
Try again.
3

Is the subject 'Eu'?

YES ↓
NO
Check other endings (-eu, -emos, -eram).
4

Add -i to the stem!

NO
Success!

Common Regular -er Verbs

🏠

Daily Life

  • Comer
  • Beber
  • Vender
🧠

Mind & Skills

  • Aprender
  • Entender
  • Escrever

よくある質問

21 問

It means 'Perfect Past.' In grammar, 'perfect' means completed or finished, not that it was flawless.

Most are, but some common ones like fazer, poder, and ter are irregular. You'll need to learn those separately.

Yes! Você, ele, and ela all use the -eu ending. For example: você comeu and ela comeu.

It's just a quirk of the language! Context like agora (now) or ontem (yesterday) will clear it up.

Yes, as long as the action is finished. Eu nasci (I was born) is a finished action from the past.

-i is for -er verbs like comi. -ei is for -ar verbs like falei. Don't mix them up!

Just put não before the verb: Eu não comi. It's very straightforward.

Yes, it is! Eu escrevi, você escreveu, nós escrevemos, eles escreveram.

In regions that use tu, the ending is usually -este, like tu comeste. But você is more common in Brazil.

No, comem (present) is short. Comeram (past) is longer and ends with a nasal 'oo' sound.

Usually no. Descriptions use the Imperfect tense. Use this for actions, like choveu (it rained).

Yes! Eu conheci means 'I met' or 'I got to know.' It's a very useful verb.

Look for ontem, anteontem (day before yesterday), mês passado, and há dois dias (two days ago).

Yes, vender is a perfect example of a regular -er verb. Eu vendi meu carro (I sold my car).

Yes, in comi, the stress is on the i. It sounds sharp and clear.

No, that requires a different structure. This is only for 'I ate' (finished).

People will usually still understand you, but you might sound like you're talking about the wrong person or time.

Yes! In Portugal, it means 'to understand.' Eu percebi means 'I understood.'

A gente is informal for 'we.' It uses the same ending as ele: A gente comeu.

Yes, it is used constantly in daily conversation to report what happened during the day.

Yes, they rhyme perfectly! All regular -er verbs in the você form will rhyme.

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