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elegían

Elegían is the third-person plural imperfect indicative form of the Spanish verb elegir, meaning to choose or to elect. As a past tense form, it describes ongoing or repeated actions in the past, rather than a single completed act.

Conjugation and morphology: The imperfect tense of elegir for all subjects is regular in its endings, with

Etymology: The verb elegir comes from the Latin eligere, meaning to select or to pick. Over time,

Usage notes: Elegían is used to describe past selections or elections viewed as habitual or continuous over

Examples: "Los miembros del jurado elegían al ganador entre varias propuestas." "Cuando eran jóvenes, elegían a

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a
stem
that
remains
ele-
in
the
imperfect.
The
forms
are:
yo
elegía,
tú
elegías,
él/ella/usted
elegía,
nosotros
elegíamos,
vosotros
elegíais,
ellos/ellas/ustedes
elegían.
The
form
elegían
specifically
corresponds
to
“they
were
choosing”
or
“they
used
to
choose.”
it
entered
Spanish
through
Vulgar
Latin,
evolving
into
the
current
form
with
the
modern
root
ele-
and
the
characteristic
irregular
present
tense
forms,
while
the
imperfect
uses
regular
endings.
a
period,
or
to
set
a
scene
in
narrative
past.
For
completed
past
actions,
the
preterite
elegieron
would
be
used
instead.
In
subordinate
clauses,
it
can
appear
after
verbs
of
preference,
voting,
or
decision-making
in
the
past.
sus
representantes
cada
año."