An Overview of the Past Perfect (Pretérito Mais-que-Perfeito Composto)
The past perfect is used to describe an action that occurred before another past action. In other words, it refers to something that happened further back in the past.
For example:
Quando cheguei, ele já tinha acabado de comer.
How to Form the Past Perfect
The past perfect is formed using the imperfect of ter followed by the past participle:
| Past Perfect |
Translation |
| tinha falado |
"I/he/she had spoken" |
| tinhas falado |
"you had spoken" |
| tinha falado |
"he/she had spoken" |
| tínhamos falado |
"we had spoken" |
| tinham falado |
"they had spoken" |
Common usage
The past perfect is often used with words like:
Conditional structures
A common structure combines the past perfect with the conditional:
👉 Note:
🧠 Key point
The past perfect helps establish the sequence of past events, clearly showing which action happened first.
Questions about the Past Perfect
Q: Why is it Se o tinha visto… and NOT Se o teria visto?
After the word se, you can use the present, the imperfect, or the future, but not the conditional. Therefore, se cannot be directly followed by the conditional or the past conditional.
In structures like “If I had known…”, Portuguese uses the past perfect subjunctive, not the conditional:
👉 The conditional (teria visto) appears in the main clause, not after se.