Language/German/Grammar/Past-Tense-—-Part-2-—-Simple-Past

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Past Tense - Part 1 Past Tense - Part 2
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German Grammar → Past Tense → Simple Past

How to form the simple past (regular verbs)[edit | edit source]

To form the simple past, you take the verb stem and add the endings as follows:

Pronoun Ending
ich -te
du -test
er/sie/es -te
wir -ten
ihr -tet
sie -ten


Example: kaufen (to buy)

Present Tense Simple Past
Pronoun Verb Pronoun Participle
ich kaufe ich kaufte
du kaufst du kauftest
er/sie/es kauft er/sie/es kaufte
wir kaufen wir kauften
ihr kauft ihr kauftet
sie kaufen sie kauften

Specifics[edit | edit source]

For verbs whose stem ends in "d" or "t", an "e" is inserted before the ending. The simple reason for this is that otherwise the words would not be easy to pronounce. (For the same reason, by the way, an "e" is inserted before some endings in the present tense).


Example: reden (to talk)

Present Tense Simple Past
Pronoun Verb Pronoun Participle
ich rede ich redete
du redest du redetest
er/sie/es redet er/sie/es redete
wir reden wir redeten
ihr redet ihr redetet
sie reden sie redeten

The "e" is also inserted in verbs whose stem ends in a consonant + "m" or "n". However, this does not apply to the stem endings "lm", "mm", "rm", "ln", "nn", "rn". So in fact there are only a few important verbs that are affected by this at all.

Examples: atmen (to breathe) --> ich atmete; rechnen (to calculate) --> ich rechnete; widmen (to dedicate) --> ich widmete


Irregular Verbs[edit | edit source]

Besides the infinitive, dictionaries also give (at least for the irregular verbs) the 1st person singular and the past participle. It is important that you always learn these three forms. If you know the 1st person singular in the simple past, then the irregular verbs will behave regularly again.


There are two types of irregular verbs.

Type 1 only changes the verb stem. The endings of the simple past remain the same as with regular verbs.

Example: rennen (to ran), rannte, gerannt

Present Tense Simple Past
Pronoun Verb Pronoun Participle
ich renne ich rannte
du rennst du ranntest
er/sie/es rennt er/sie/es rannte
wir rennen wir rannten
ihr rennt ihr ranntet
sie rennen sie rannten

The second type is called "strong verbs". Here the stem changes and the endings are partly dropped or correspond to the present endings.

Endings of irregular verbs in the simple past:

Pronoun Ending
ich --
du -st
er/sie/es --
wir -en
ihr -t
sie -en

Example: fahren (to drive), fuhr, gefahren

Present Tense Simple Past
Pronoun Verb Pronoun Participle
ich fahre ich fuhr
du fährst du fuhrst
er/sie/es fährt er/sie/es fuhr
wir fahren wir fuhren
ihr fahrt ihr fuhrt
sie fahren sie fuhren


How to use the simple past[edit | edit source]

With the exception of the verbs "haben", "sein", "denken", "finden" and the modal verbs (dürfen, können, mögen, müssen, sollen, wollen) the simple past is not used at all in spoken German. In the written language, the simple past is used for literary texts and forms the narrative tense.

Videos[edit | edit source]

German Grammar: Past Perfect Tense - YouTube[edit | edit source]

Learn German | Perfekt | Past tense | Part 1 | German for beginners ...[edit | edit source]

Simple Past (Preterite) w/ Regular Verbs - German 2 WS ...[edit | edit source]

Other Lessons[edit | edit source]

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