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Gasté

Gastó is the third-person singular preterite form of the Spanish verb gastar. The verb means to spend or use up resources, typically money, time, or effort. It is used to describe a completed action in the past and is common in both written and spoken Spanish. The corresponding forms are gasté, gastaste, gastó, gastamos, gastasteis, gastaron. The accents on gasté and gastó indicate stress in the preterite.

Origins and related forms: gastar is a regular -ar verb, and its noun form gasto refers to

Usage notes: Gastó describes a completed past spending event, as opposed to gastaba, which expresses habitual

Translations and examples: In English, gastó is typically translated as "spent." Examples: "Él gastó todo su dinero

See also: gastar, gasto, gasto (nombre), pretérito indefinido, imperfecto.

an
expense
or
the
amount
spent.
The
word
is
of
Romance
origin
and
is
linked
to
other
terms
describing
consumption
or
expenditure
in
related
languages
and
dialects.
or
ongoing
past
spending
(imperfect).
It
can
take
direct
objects
such
as
dinero,
tiempo,
esfuerzo,
or
recursos:
"gastó
dinero,"
"gastó
mucho
tiempo,"
"gastó
esfuerzo."
It
is
compatible
with
a
variety
of
constructions,
including
phrases
like
gastar
en
algo,
gastar
recursos,
or
incluso
con
se
gastó
for
reflexive/passive-like
meanings
in
phrases
such
as
"se
gastó
todo
el
presupuesto"
(where
the
emphasis
is
on
the
total
consumption
of
resources).
en
el
viaje."
"Ella
gastó
demasiado
tiempo
en
esa
tarea."