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IntermediateAspect
How grammatical aspect expresses whether an action is completed, ongoing, habitual, or repeated in Spanish, English and Chinese.
Compare languages
English and Spanish conjugate verbs for both tense and aspect. Chinese has no verb conjugation, expressing aspect entirely through particles.
Overview
Aspect expresses how an action relates to time — whether it is completed, ongoing, habitual, or repeated. It is independent of tense (when something happens).
- Spanish: Aspect is built into the conjugation system. The preterite vs imperfect distinction is fundamental. Progressive aspect uses estar + gerund. Perfect aspect uses haber + participle.
- English: Aspect is built with auxiliaries. Continuous (be + -ing), perfect (have + -ed), and combinations (have been -ing). Simple aspect is unmarked.
- Chinese: Aspect is expressed entirely through particles that follow the verb: 了 (completion), 着 (ongoing state), 过 (past experience), 在 (ongoing action). The verb never changes.
Spanish
Preterite vs imperfect (completed vs ongoing)
The most important aspect distinction in Spanish:
Preterite — completed, punctual, with boundaries:
- Ayer hablé con María. (Yesterday I spoke with María. — one completed conversation)
- La película empezó a las ocho. (The movie started at eight. — completed event)
- Me rompí la pierna. (I broke my leg. — completed, resultative)
Imperfect — ongoing, habitual, background, no boundaries:
- Antes hablaba con María todos los días. (I used to speak with María every day. — habitual)
- La película empezaba cuando llegué. (The movie was starting when I arrived. — ongoing)
- Tenía miedo. (I was afraid. — state, not event)
Key uses of imperfect:
- Habitual past: Cuando era niño, iba a la playa.
- Ongoing background: Llovía cuando salí.
- Mental/emotional states: Quería ir. / Era feliz.
- Physical descriptions: Era alto y delgado.
- Clock time / age: Eran las tres. / Tenía veinte años.
Progressive (estar + gerund)
Ongoing action at a specific moment:
- Estoy hablando. (I am speaking.)
- Estaba comiendo. (I was eating.)
- Está lloviendo. (It is raining.)
Note: Spanish progressive is more restricted than English. It emphasizes ongoing action, not future plans:
- Mañana voy a Madrid. (Tomorrow I’m going to Madrid. — NOT estoy yendo)
Perfect (haber + past participle)
Action with relevance to another time:
- He hablado con ella. (I have spoken with her. — present relevance)
- Había comido antes. (I had eaten before. — past relevance)
- Habrá terminado para entonces. (He will have finished by then. — future relevance)
Periphrastic aspect constructions
| Construction | Aspect | Example |
|---|---|---|
| ir a + infinitive | prospective | Voy a comer. (I’m going to eat.) |
| volver a + infinitive | repetitive | Vuelvo a intentarlo. (I try again.) |
| acabar de + infinitive | recent past | Acabo de llegar. (I just arrived.) |
| estar por + infinitive | imminent | Estoy por salir. (I’m about to leave.) |
| seguir + gerund | continuative | Sigue lloviendo. (It keeps raining.) |
| dejar de + infinitive | cessation | Dejó de fumar. (He stopped smoking.) |
| empezar a + infinitive | ingressive | Empecé a estudiar. (I started studying.) |
English
Simple aspect (unmarked)
The default — no special marking:
- I speak Spanish. (habitual)
- I spoke to her. (completed past)
- I will call tomorrow. (future)
Continuous (be + -ing)
Action in progress at a specific time:
- I am speaking. (present continuous)
- I was speaking. (past continuous)
- I will be speaking. (future continuous)
Uses:
- Action in progress: She is sleeping right now.
- Temporary situation: I am living in Madrid.
- Future arrangement: I am meeting her at 3.
- Changing situation: The climate is getting warmer.
- Habitual with always (complaint): He is always leaving his stuff everywhere.
Stative verbs rarely take continuous:
- ✅ I know him. (NOT I am knowing him.)
- ✅ I love chocolate. (NOT I am loving chocolate. — except McDonald’s slogan)
- ✅ I understand. (NOT I am understanding.)
Perfect (have + -ed)
Action completed before another time, with relevance:
- I have spoken to her. (present perfect — past action, present relevance)
- I had spoken to her. (past perfect — before another past action)
- I will have spoken to her. (future perfect — before another future action)
Present perfect uses:
- Life experience: I have been to China.
- Recent past with now: I have just finished.
- Unfinished time: I have seen three movies this week. (week not over)
- Result now: I have lost my keys. (still lost)
Past simple vs present perfect:
- I saw that movie. (when? unspecified, finished)
- I have seen that movie. (in my life, experience)
Perfect continuous (have been + -ing)
Ongoing activity up to now:
- I have been waiting for an hour. (and still waiting)
- She had been working there for years. (before she quit)
Used to / would (habitual past)
| Form | Usage | Example |
|---|---|---|
| used to + verb | past habit, no longer true | I used to smoke. |
| would + verb | past habit, with time reference | Every summer we would go camping. |
| past simple | past habit (also valid) | I smoked for ten years. |
Note: Would for habits requires a time reference. Used to does not.
Chinese
了 — completion / change
了 is the most complex aspect particle:
Verb + 了 = completed action:
- 我吃了饭。(I ate [and finished].)
- 他买了一本书。(He bought a book.)
Sentence-final 了 = change of state:
- 下雨了。(It’s raining now. — change from not raining)
- 我懂了。(I understand now. — change from not understanding)
Both 了 = completed action + change:
- 吃了饭了。(I’ve eaten already.)
过 — past experience
过 indicates the action has happened at some time (experience):
- 我去过北京。(I’ve been to Beijing. — experience)
- 他吃过中餐。(He’s eaten Chinese food.)
Compare 了 and 过:
- 吃了 (ate — completed, specific)
- 吃过 (have eaten — experience, non-specific)
在 — ongoing action
在 marks progressive aspect:
- 我在吃饭。(I’m eating.)
- 他在工作。(He’s working.)
在 + 呢 for emphasis:
- 在下雨呢!(It’s raining! — ongoing, emphatic)
着 — continuous state
着 indicates a continuing state or accompanying action:
- 门开着。(The door is open. — state)
- 她穿着红衣服。(She’s wearing red clothes. — state)
- 笑着说 (say with a smile — accompanying action)
着 vs 在:
- 在穿 (in the process of putting on)
- 穿着 (wearing — state)
起来 / 下去 — directional aspect
起来 (beginning): 唱起来 (start singing)
下去 (continuing): 说下去 (continue speaking)
完 / 好 / 到 — resultative complements
Chinese expresses result through verb + complement:
| Complement | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| 完 | finished | 做完 (finish doing) |
| 好 | completed well | 写好 (finish writing) |
| 到 | achieved/reached | 看到 (succeed in seeing) |
| 见 | perceived | 听见 (hear) |
| 懂 | understood | 看懂 (understand by reading) |
Habitual aspect (no marker)
Chinese expresses habit through adverbs, not verb morphology:
- 我经常喝咖啡。(I often drink coffee.)
- 每天都跑步。(I run every day.)
Comparison at a glance
| Aspect | Spanish | English | Chinese |
|---|---|---|---|
| Completed | Preterite | Past simple / present perfect | 了 |
| Ongoing | Estar + gerund | Be + -ing | 在 / 着 |
| Habitual | Imperfect | Used to / would / past simple | Adverbs (经常, 每天) |
| Past experience | Perfect (he hablado) | Present perfect (have spoken) | 过 |
| Resultative | Estar + participle / perfect | Have + -ed / be + -ed | Complements (完, 好, 到) |
| Beginning | Empezar a | Start to / start -ing | 起来 |
| Continuative | Seguir + gerund | Keep -ing / continue to | 下去 |
| Repetitive | Volver a | Again / re- | 再 / 又 |
| Verb change | Yes (conjugation) | Yes (auxiliaries) | No (particles only) |
Examples in context
I ate (completed)
- ES: Comí. (preterite)
- EN: I ate. / I have eaten.
- ZH: 我吃了。
I was eating (ongoing)
- ES: Estaba comiendo.
- EN: I was eating.
- ZH: 我在吃饭。
I used to smoke (habitual)
- ES: Fumaba. (imperfect)
- EN: I used to smoke. / I would smoke.
- ZH: 我以前抽烟。
I’ve been to Beijing (experience)
- ES: He estado en Beijing.
- EN: I have been to Beijing.
- ZH: 我去过北京。
Common mistakes
-
English speakers learning Spanish: Using preterite for habitual: Cuando era niño, fui a la playa → …iba a la playa
-
Spanish speakers learning English: Using continuous with stative verbs: I am knowing him → I know him
-
English speakers learning Chinese: Overusing 了: 昨天我去了商店了 → 昨天我去商店 (simple narrative)
-
Chinese speakers learning English: Omitting continuous: I eat now → I am eating now
Related topics
- Verb Tenses: How tense and aspect interact
- Particles: How Chinese particles express aspect
- Negation: How aspect is negated in each language
- Questions: How aspect appears in questions
Examples
Completed action
Preterite: hablé
Ongoing action
Progressive: estoy hablando
Habitual action
Imperfect: hablaba
Past experience
Perfect: he hablado
Resultative state
Perfect / estar + participle
Beginning of action
empezar a / empezar + gerund
Repetition
volver a + infinitive
Verb conjugation for aspect
Yes (different endings)
Examples
Completed action
Past simple: I spoke / I have spoken
Ongoing action
Continuous: I am speaking
Habitual action
Used to / would: I used to speak
Past experience
Present perfect: I have spoken
Resultative state
Present perfect / be + -ed
Beginning of action
start to / start -ing
Repetition
again / re-
Verb conjugation for aspect
Yes (auxiliaries: be, have, will)
Examples
Completed action
说了 (verb + 了)
Ongoing action
在说 / 说着
Habitual action
经常说 (adverb)
Past experience
说过 (verb + 过)
Resultative state
完 / 好 / 到 (verb complement)
Beginning of action
开始 / 起来
Repetition
再 / 又
Verb conjugation for aspect
No (particles only)
Comparison at a glance
| Grammar concepts | Spanish | English | Chinese |
|---|---|---|---|
| Completed action | Preterite: hablé | Past simple: I spoke / I have spoken | 说了 (verb + 了) |
| Ongoing action | Progressive: estoy hablando | Continuous: I am speaking | 在说 / 说着 |
| Habitual action | Imperfect: hablaba | Used to / would: I used to speak | 经常说 (adverb) |
| Past experience | Perfect: he hablado | Present perfect: I have spoken | 说过 (verb + 过) |
| Resultative state | Perfect / estar + participle | Present perfect / be + -ed | 完 / 好 / 到 (verb complement) |
| Beginning of action | empezar a / empezar + gerund | start to / start -ing | 开始 / 起来 |
| Repetition | volver a + infinitive | again / re- | 再 / 又 |
| Verb conjugation for aspect | Yes (different endings) | Yes (auxiliaries: be, have, will) | No (particles only) |
Select at least one language to view comparisons
Side-by-side comparison
| Grammar concepts | Spanish | English | Chinese |
|---|---|---|---|
| Completed action | Preterite: hablé | Past simple: I spoke / I have spoken | 说了 (verb + 了) |
| Ongoing action | Progressive: estoy hablando | Continuous: I am speaking | 在说 / 说着 |
| Habitual action | Imperfect: hablaba | Used to / would: I used to speak | 经常说 (adverb) |
| Past experience | Perfect: he hablado | Present perfect: I have spoken | 说过 (verb + 过) |
| Resultative state | Perfect / estar + participle | Present perfect / be + -ed | 完 / 好 / 到 (verb complement) |
| Beginning of action | empezar a / empezar + gerund | start to / start -ing | 开始 / 起来 |
| Repetition | volver a + infinitive | again / re- | 再 / 又 |
| Verb conjugation for aspect | Yes (different endings) | Yes (auxiliaries: be, have, will) | No (particles only) |
Select at least one language to view comparisons
Examples in context
Completed action
Spanish
Preterite: hablé
English
Past simple: I spoke / I have spoken
Chinese
说了 (verb + 了)
Ongoing action
Spanish
Progressive: estoy hablando
English
Continuous: I am speaking
Chinese
在说 / 说着
Habitual action
Spanish
Imperfect: hablaba
English
Used to / would: I used to speak
Chinese
经常说 (adverb)
Past experience
Spanish
Perfect: he hablado
English
Present perfect: I have spoken
Chinese
说过 (verb + 过)
Resultative state
Spanish
Perfect / estar + participle
English
Present perfect / be + -ed
Chinese
完 / 好 / 到 (verb complement)
Beginning of action
Spanish
empezar a / empezar + gerund
English
start to / start -ing
Chinese
开始 / 起来
Repetition
Spanish
volver a + infinitive
English
again / re-
Chinese
再 / 又
Verb conjugation for aspect
Spanish
Yes (different endings)
English
Yes (auxiliaries: be, have, will)
Chinese
No (particles only)
Select at least one language to view comparisons
Key Takeaways
Spanish: Aspect is built into the conjugation system. The preterite vs imperfect distinction is fundamental. Progressive aspect uses estar + gerund. ...
English: Aspect is built with auxiliaries. Continuous (be + -ing), perfect (have + -ed), and combinations (have been -ing). Simple aspect is unmarked...
Chinese: Aspect is expressed entirely through particles that follow the verb: 了le (completion), 着zháo (ongoing state), 过guò (past experience), 在zài (...
Key concepts compared: Completed action, Ongoing action, Habitual action.
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Last updated: June 4, 2026