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Tense guide
Pretérito anterior (Past Anterior)

Language: Spanish
Tense:
Person:

Introduction

This tense is used to talk about a past action that happened and was completed immediately before another action in the past. It emphasizes that one event finished just a moment before the next one began. Think of it as a very quick, one-after-the-other sequence.

The main use of this tense is to show an action that was completed right before another past event. It almost always appears after words that introduce a sequence, like as soon as, when, or after. It shows a direct and immediate connection between the two past actions.

En cuanto hubo terminado la clase, los estudiantes salieron.
(As soon as the class had finished, the students left.)
Tan pronto como hubo llegado a casa, me llamó.
(As soon as he had gotten home, he called me.)
Apenas el ladrón hubo entrado, sonó la alarma.
(As soon as the thief had entered, the alarm went off.)
Cuando hubo dicho la verdad, se sintió mejor.
(When she had told the truth, she felt better.)
Después de que hubo comido, se tomó un café.
(After he had eaten, he had a coffee.)
Luego que el orador hubo concluido, la gente aplaudió.
(After the speaker had concluded, the people applauded.)

IMPORTANT: This tense is extremely rare in modern Spanish. You will almost only find it in classic literature or very formal legal documents. In everyday conversation and modern writing, people use other past tenses (like the Pretérito Pluscuamperfecto or Pretérito Indefinido) to express the same idea. It is useful to recognize it, but you will almost never need to use it yourself.

Conjugation patterns