Understanding Spanish Tenses: Examples of Pluperfect, Imperfect & More

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The discussion revolves around the complexities of Spanish verb tenses, specifically the pluperfect, imperfect, anterior preterite, and anterior future in both indicative and subjunctive moods. The original poster expresses a strong desire to understand these grammatical concepts, seeking examples in both English and Spanish for clarity. Participants share their own struggles with these tenses, noting that the imperfect tense describes ongoing actions or states, contrasting it with the preterite, which indicates completed actions. There is a general sentiment that the multitude of conjugations can be overwhelming, yet some participants acknowledge having a grasp of the basic tenses like preterite and imperfect. Overall, the conversation highlights the challenges of mastering Spanish verb conjugations and the need for clear examples to aid understanding.
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I'm not supposed to know any of the stuff I'm about to ask yet, but due to my extreme need to "know," I have to ask. Thanks!

Could anyone give me examples of the pluperfect (in indicative and subjunctive), imperfect (in subjunctive), the "pretérito anterior" (I guess that means anterior preterite (indicative), and the anterior future (indicative and subjunctive).

I would be able to figure this out myself, given a verb conjugated in these tenses, but I don't even know what 1/2 of this stuff is in English! So, if anyone could just give me examples (in English and Spanish, so I can compare) of anyone or all of these things, it would help a great deal! Thanks!
 
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Good grief and good luck...

I don't know any of that stuff in any language !
I've always been happy to have conversational abilities.
 
I don't remember what pluperfect is, and I can't remember the difference between subjunctive and indicative. However, in the past tense, imperfect is kind of like an active/transitive verb. "I was going", as opposed to preterite, which would be "I went". In imperfect, you're describing something that has been happening up until now ("You've been running") or something that was occurring over an interval of time when something else happened ("I studied while you were sleeping"--"were sleeping" is imperfect, and "I studied" is preterite).

All in all, there are too many damn conjugations!
 
Thanks, I do understant preterite, imperfect, subjunctive, indicative, etc., I just found some really weird tenses online, but I think I may have figured some of them out off of a website that I went on.
 
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