Pronouns, Objects, Questions Flashcards
I
yo
The. Can replace noun
el/la
a
un/una
he/she/It
lo/la
I see it
Lo veo
They called her
La llamaron
Your father knows he
Tu padre la conoce.
Direct object for me
me
I see me
Me veo.
What luck!
Qué suerte!
What can I do on behalf of Isabella?
¿Qué puedo hacer por Isabella?
How nice that it’s you
¡Qué bueno que seas tú!
why?
¿Por Qué?
I shouldn’t get worried by those things
No debo preocuparme por esos cosas.
I want what he has
Quiero lo que tiene
Use often as “lo que” and means “what” but not in a question
I am what I am
Soy lo que soy
I found you
Te encontre
use when someone is recipient of something. Ie. I gave the book to her. Direct or indirect?
Indirect (le, te, me)
I said to him: ‘whatever it is’
Yo le dije a él: ‘Sea lo que sea’
I see myself
Me veo
He finds himself with a girl
Se encuentra con una chica
I’m going to sit at some bar
Me sentaré en un bar
you sit yourself in spanish
That: M/F/Neither
Ese, esa, eso
This: M/F/Neither
Este, esta, esto
Why are there two different words for “that”?
Que: is a connector word (I like that he gave him money)
Eso: replaces a noun (That is a big bug)
I gave him this
Le di esto
because of that / that’s why
Por eso
but our father doesn’t know it, and that’s why my brother is worried
Pero nuestro padre no lo sabe, y por eso mi hermano está preocupado
My brothers called me
Mis hermanos me llamó
indeed
Sí (reiterate)
very
muy
use when something has changed (kind of like “already” or “anymore” or “now”)
Ya
I already know where they were
Ya sé que lo eran
But they aren’t anymore
Pero ya no lo son