Mastering the Conditional Perfect Tense in Spanish

Here’s how to say I would have or wouldn’t have in Spanish. First you’re going to start with one of these Abria, Ubiera, or ubiese. These are all interchangeable. Sometimes, depending on the country, you’ll either say Ubiera or ubiese. Not a big deal with which one you use though. Here’s a list of how to use it with other subjects. Take a screenshot. Now you’re going to start with this, followed by a verb in its past participle form. To put a verb in its past participle form, take off the AR ending and add adal. Or you take off the IR or er ending and add idal. For example, comido. In the past participle form, to say eaten would be comido ablado. In the past participle form would be ablado. So let’s do some examples. I would have eaten, but I didn’t have time. Hubiera comido, pero no tuve tiempo. I would have done it differently. Lo hubiera hecho diferente, eh? By the way, is the participle form of Haber, but it’s irregular, which is why it’s not Asido. I wouldn’t have bought it. No, lo hubiera comprado. Would you have cooked it differently? Lo hubiera cocinado diferente. For my free training on how to become fluent in Spanish within a year, I’m going to teach you everything you need to know. What to focus on, what not to focus on, what resources to use to do this so you can be having conversations in Spanish within just A couple of months. Just click on the first link in my bio to save your spot in this free training right away. Follow to learn more Spanish!