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Tucaneo Academy · Level B2 · Grammar

Woulda,
Coulda, Shoulda

The Conditional Perfect — El Condicional Compuesto

Hypothetical past · Speculation · Regrets

In English: would have + past participle
Yo habría terminado → I would have finished

How to Form It · Structure

The Formula

You always need two parts: the auxiliary verb haber in the simple conditional, plus the past participle of your main verb.

Auxiliary

HABER

habría · habrías · habría…

+

Main verb

Participio

-ado · -ido · irregular

Yo habría terminado antes.

→ I would have finished earlier.

⚠ Critical rule:

haber and the participle must always stay together — you cannot separate them with other words.

Step 1 · The Auxiliary Verb

Conjugating Haber

This is your helping verb in the Simple Conditional. Memorize this table — it never changes.

Subject Pronoun Haber
Yo habría
habrías
Él / Ella / Usted habría
Nosotros/as habríamos
Vosotros/as habríais
Ellos / Ellas / Ustedes habrían

Notice that Yo and Él/Ella/Usted share the same form: habría. Context tells them apart!

Step 2 · Past Participle

Regular Participles

Drop the verb ending and add the correct participle suffix — just two rules to remember.

-AR verbs → -ADO

hablar → hablado

Yo habría hablado con él.

→ I would have spoken with him.

-ER / -IR verbs → -IDO

comer → comido
vivir → vivido

Ella habría comido más.

→ She would have eaten more.

The pattern never changes: find the stem → add -ado or -ido. If you can conjugate the present tense, you can build any participle!

Step 2 continued · Irregular Participles

The Irregulars — Memorize These

These 5 verbs don't follow the -ado/-ido rule. You must know them by heart.

hacer

hecho

decir

dicho

escribir

escrito

abrir

abierto

ver

visto

Yo habría escrito el correo.

→ I would have written the email.

▶ Tip:

Notice that many irregular participles end in -to (hecho, dicho, escrito, abierto, visto). That pattern is your clue!

Use #1 of 3 · Unrealized Actions

The "Pero" Trigger

Something would have happened — but it didn't

Use the Conditional Perfect to say something would have happened, then use pero to explain what stopped it.

habría + [participio]
,
pero…
= excuse / obstacle

Yo habría ido con ellos, pero no me invitaron.

→ I would have gone with them, but they didn't invite me.

Ella habría llamado, pero no tenía su número.

→ She would have called, but she didn't have his number.

▶ Tip:

When you see pero in the second clause, that's your signal — the Conditional Perfect belongs in the first clause.

Use #2 of 3 · Two Sub-meanings

Speculation & Criticism

Speculation

English: "must have" — guessing about something that already happened.

Habrían sido las diez.

→ It must have been ten o'clock.

Criticism / Regret

English: "could have / should have" — expressing that someone failed to do something they should have.

Habrías podido avisarme.

→ You could have warned me.

▶ Key difference:

Speculation is neutral guessing ("must have been…"). Criticism implies the person failed to do something they should have.

Use #3 of 3 · Type 3 Conditional

The "Si" Clause

If-clause (Si)

Si + hubiera + participio

,

Result clause

habría + participio

Si hubieras estudiado, habrías aprobado.

→ If you had studied, you would have passed.

⚠ Never use conditional after "si"!

Si habría tenido tiempo… ✗

Si hubiera tenido tiempo… ✓

▶ Don't confuse:

terminaría = "I would finish" (simple conditional) · habría terminado = "I would have finished" (conditional perfect)

Practice · Speaking Activity

¿Qué habrías hecho?

Spin the wheel — answer using "Yo habría…". Your teacher will ask follow-up questions!

¡Gira para ver tu situación!

Your answer must use:

Yo habría + [participio]…

…pero / …y entonces / …porque…

👽

Viste un alienígena robando tu coche

💰

Encontraste una cartera con $1,000,000

Tu jefe te llamó a las 3 a.m.

🌍

Descubriste que puedes viajar en el tiempo