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| The history of irregular verbs in Spanish....Grammar questions– conjugations, verb tenses, adverbs, adjectives, word order, syntax, etc. | 
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			You flatter me. I have no specific answer other than very generally, the original Indo-European language from which most European languages derive was monumentally complicated in terms of syntax and grammar. There has been a general tendency over thousands of years to simplify. Take for example nouns - there were probably a dozen case endings, reduced to 5 for classical Greek, and 8 for Latin. There were probably many genders which quite early on were reduced to 3: masculine, feminine, neuter. There were huge numbers of declensions which reduced to about 14 different ones in Greek.  Verbs used to be far more complicated: In Greek there are more moods than in Spanish and the most basic verbs, hence to oldest, are all effectively irregular. Verbs invented later tended to be far more regular. A similar pattern can be seen in other languages. The overall pattern is that very generally the older a verb the more irregular it is going to be. (Note that when a new verb is invented in Spanish it is regular with an -ar ending - another piece of simplification.) It follows that the most common verbs are more likely to be the irregular ones. I think this phenomenon is more relevant to Indo-European languages than others. Turkish (a member of the Finnish-Hungarian language group) has for example only one irregular verb, to be and other languages have no irregular verbs at all. But I'm out of my depth here. | 
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			#4
			
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				Irregular Spanish Verbs
			 
			
			I don't know much about the history, but memorizing all the different irregularities has been hard for me - ESPECIALLY irregular verbs in other tenses.  My Spanish teacher taught us a song that really helps me remember the irregular spanish verbs in the preterite tense.   I just posted a video of me singing it on YouTube the other day. Maybe it'll help you too!  http://www.youtube.com/user/languagewrangler#p/u/2/asYlLwKygRs Good luck!   | 
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