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Infinitive or perfect past tense

 

Grammar questions– conjugations, verb tenses, adverbs, adjectives, word order, syntax, etc.


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  #1
Old August 20, 2016, 01:27 AM
Stu Stu is offline
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Infinitive or perfect past tense

pero acabus de llegar

If I were composing this I would be tempted to use the perfect past rather than the infinitive, I guess if the person has arrived then it it technically in the present or close to it.

When is this construction called for?
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  #2
Old August 20, 2016, 11:20 AM
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aleCcowaN aleCcowaN is offline
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acabas is present simple indicative

yo acabo
tú acabas
él acaba
....

acabas de llegar ---> acabar de + infinitivo ---> it's a verbal periphrasis meaning "have + just + infinitive" or "just + past simple"

acabas de llegar = You've just arrived
acabo de comer = I just ate
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  #3
Old August 22, 2016, 03:31 AM
Stu Stu is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aleCcowaN View Post
Sorry, something went wrong there

acabas is present simple indicative

yo acabo
tú acabas
él acaba
....

acabas de llegar ---> acabar de + infinitivo ---> it's a verbal periphrasis meaning "have + just + infinitive" or "just + past simple"

acabas de llegar = You've just arrived
acabo de comer = I just ate
So when you say "have +" Do you mean this may have been preceded by haber?

haber + acabar de = infinitivo

Is there a distinction in Spanish then such that if you have arrived, then that is present tense (you are now here) but if if you just arrived that was talking about the time in the past when you arrived?
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  #4
Old August 22, 2016, 05:18 AM
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acabar de + infinitivo= to have just done something (idiomatic)

The auxiliary verb haber isn't needed in this case, since the idiomatic expression has that meaning when translated to English.

acabo de comer = I've just eaten
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