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terminábamos

The term "terminábamos" is the first-person plural (we) form of the Spanish verb "terminar" (to finish) in the imperfect past tense. It is a regular verb conjugation following the standard pattern for verbs ending in -ar. The primary function of the imperfect tense is to describe ongoing, repeated, or habitual actions in the past, or to set a scene and provide background information.

For example, the sentence "Cuando éramos niños, terminábamos nuestra tarea antes de cenar" translates to "When

This conjugation can also be employed to describe an action that was in progress when it was

The formation of "terminábamos" follows the standard imperfect -ar verb ending: the stem "termin-" is combined

we
were
children,
we
used
to
finish
our
homework
before
dinner."
In
this
context,
"terminábamos"
indicates
a
repeated
or
habitual
action
that
occurred
over
an
extended
period
in
the
past.
It
does
not
refer
to
a
single,
completed
action,
for
which
the
preterite
tense
"terminamos"
would
be
used.
interrupted
by
another
event.
An
illustration
of
this
would
be,
"Terminábamos
de
comer
cuando
sonó
el
teléfono,"
meaning
"We
were
finishing
eating
when
the
phone
rang."
Here,
"terminábamos"
establishes
the
ongoing
action
that
was
happening
at
the
time
of
the
interruption.
with
the
imperfect
ending
"-ábamos."
This
conjugation
is
a
fundamental
element
of
narrating
past
events
in
Spanish,
allowing
speakers
to
convey
nuanced
temporal
relationships
and
habitual
past
activities.