Portuguese Grammar Guide

Past participle (e.g.: falado, dito, vindo, comido)

In this section: Description, Questions, Exercises

Description

An Overview of Past Participles

The past participle is commonly used after the auxiliary ter (e.g.: tu tens falado) and also with estar (e.g.: o copo está partido) and ser (e.g.: a explicação é complicada).

When the past participle is used as an adjective with ser or estar, it agrees in gender and number with the noun it modifies:

  • As portas estão abertas.

However, there is no agreement when the past participle is used with ter, because it forms part of the verb:

  • As raparigas têm aberto as portas.


How to form the Past Participle

The past participle is formed by replacing the infinitive ending (-ar, -er, -ir) with:

  • -ado for -ar verbs
    comprar → tenho comprado

  • -ido for -er / -ir verbs
    comer → ele tem comido
    viver → têm vivido bem


⚠️ Important note

In Portuguese, verbs whose stems end in a vowel typically do not take -ído (unlike Spanish), but may involve accent changes:

  • ler → lido

  • ouvir → ouvido


Common irregular past participles

Infinitive Past participle
dizer dito
abrir aberto
fazer feito
morrer morto
romper roto
ver visto
cobrir coberto
escrever escrito
pôr posto
voltar voltado / volto
resolver resolvido / resoluto
ser sido
ir ido

Double past participles

Some verbs have two forms:

  • The regular form is used with ter

  • The irregular form is often used as an adjective

Example:

  • O professor tem confundido os alunos.

  • O exame é confuso.

Other examples:

Verb Regular Irregular (adjective)
confundir confundido confuso
eleger elegido eleito
prender prendido preso
aceitar aceitado aceite

🧠 Key rule

The past participle only agrees in gender and number when used as an adjective:

  • As portas estão fechadas.

There is never agreement with ter:

  • As mulheres têm escolhido a jovem
    têm escolhidas


The rules of Portuguese are not always predictable—but by practicing and applying them in writing, you will master both the general patterns and the most important exceptions.

Tags: verbs auxiliaries subject agreement Infinitive
In this section: Description, Questions, Exercises
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