
Tenho estado motivado
Fill in the blanks with the compound tenses.

Fill in the blanks with the compound tenses.

Fill in the blanks with the verbs in the P. Perfeito Composto or P. Mais Que Perfeito Composto.

The Portuguese equivalent of the English Past Perfect is called Pretérito Mais-que-Perfeito, and it’s used to express an action that happened in the past before another past…

In short, the Pretérito Perfeito Simples is used to describe complete actions, whereas the Pretérito Perfeito Composto (also known as the Preterite) conveys an ongoing temporal quality, particularly when something has been happening recently. Read…

Portuguese has a tense for actions that occurred prior to other past events: the Pretérito Mais-que-Perfeito. While it comes in two forms, only one is widely used in everyday conversation.

Portuguese relies on the Past Participle to express completed actions, describe passive constructions, and modify nouns like an adjective.

Portuguese uses the Pretérito Perfeito Composto to convey that something has occurred repeatedly or just recently—often with an ongoing feel.

Whether you're saying what you own or forming past actions, the verb ter is a cornerstone of Portuguese grammar.

In Portuguese, the verb Ter is equivalent to the English verb Have, and it plays a crucial role in expressing possession and forming the Perfect tenses: Tenho…

In Portuguese, we use the Past Participle to form perfect tenses, the passive voice, and also as adjectives. In what follows, I’ll walk you through the Portuguese…