4:40 For native speaker of Spanish does it depend on the country for which order they use the direct object or does it depend on which one is the best to say?
Not far off! The first and second person singular pronouns are the same in both languages (but pronounced differently), 3rd person singular is LE and la rather than lo and la. Nos becomes Nous, Os becomes Vous, and Los and Las become Les.
@@LingoLearner Oh no sorry I meant the rules for placement. The only difference I remember was when Las came before quiere. In french 'les' would come after vouloir
@@mil.o Gotcha. So no, French has placement rules that are slightly more complex. This page sums it up well: www.lawlessfrench.com/grammar/object-pronoun-placement/
Enjoy (1) speaking fast enough to understand and yet to not waste time, (2) use plenty of writing, making easier to follow, (3) great use of examples . As a beginner of Spanish , I have a easy time following and thus learning. Thank you
The biggest mistake that teachers make is trying to teach kids writing first. All humans learn how to talk before they learn how to write. Speaking is much more applicable to the real world. If teachers just had kids listen and try to make conversation in Spanish every class, they would learn the language much quicker.
The DOP and IOP are the hardest bit of Spanish so far for me You explain it very well, but I’m going to need a lot of practice to get it in my thick skull
Thank you! It's important to watch multiple videos on the same subject, as some cover things others don't, or say it in a way that makes more sense. I picked up several things from this video that cemented my knowledge. Appreciate the video!
OMG I understood everything in 7 minutes. I have beem stressed out with DOPs and IOPs. Thank you so much! I'll definitely watch it again later in the morning because it's already 1am here.
Since we are changing the meaning from indicative (telling what is happening) to a command (telling someone what to do), we have to change the verb form. We don't yet have a video for command formation, but long story short, the informal command for "comprar" is "compra."
Brilliant video - you made this difficult subject really simple. I'd love to see another video which combines direct and indirect pronouns too as I'm really struggling with that!
Hello I had a question about number 9 at the end. Pon los tendores aqui. I know that 'los' in the sentence is the article and 'tenedores' is the noun we are replacing, but 'pon' is the conjugated verb form of Poner. So why in this instance is the DOP placement switched? Shouldn't it be Los pon aqui? Or alternatively Poner los aqui? Because the rules state that the DOP goes either BEFORE the conjugated verb OR it is tacked on to the end of the infinitive, but here it is tacked on to the end of the conjugated verb I don't know if I am missing something, so if someone could clear this up for me I would really appreciate it!
Good question! Yes, you are missing something :) Have another look at 2:32. "Pon" is an affirmative command, so the object gets attached. Commands require some changes to match subjects, but they are imperative, not declarative (or more simply, they are telling someone what to do, not telling/narrating what they are doing)... so we don't think of them as "conjugated." Commands are treated differently than normal conjugations, and for placement, that puts them into the "B" category! Hope that helps.
Hopefully you've identified the direct object as "la casa de mi abuela." The word "casa" (house) is singular and feminine. When you exchange that phrase for the singular feminine DOP, you get "la." Visitamos is conjugated, so the DOP goes before it. The end result is "La visitamos."
my teacher could not explain this to me in the 2 hour class period, but you made it so clear in less than 10 minutes
Teacher just want to make money mam. Théy know that if i tell you whole syllabus. You will not come from tommorow 😉😉😉😉
how high where you when you posted this and can i have some@@pankajkumar-sv1qq
This was very helpful. Thanks.
Muchas gracias por este video!
4:40 For native speaker of Spanish does it depend on the country for which order they use the direct object or does it depend on which one is the best to say?
No, it's the same in all countries, the order doesn't change and both of them are interchangeable.I'm a native Spanish speaker.
thanks bro
Am I right that this is like French really?
Not far off! The first and second person singular pronouns are the same in both languages (but pronounced differently), 3rd person singular is LE and la rather than lo and la. Nos becomes Nous, Os becomes Vous, and Los and Las become Les.
@@LingoLearner Oh no sorry I meant the rules for placement. The only difference I remember was when Las came before quiere. In french 'les' would come after vouloir
@@mil.o Gotcha. So no, French has placement rules that are slightly more complex. This page sums it up well: www.lawlessfrench.com/grammar/object-pronoun-placement/
Enjoy (1) speaking fast enough to understand and yet to not waste time, (2) use plenty of writing, making easier to follow, (3) great use of examples .
As a beginner of Spanish , I have a easy time following and thus learning.
Thank you
The biggest mistake that teachers make is trying to teach kids writing first. All humans learn how to talk before they learn how to write. Speaking is much more applicable to the real world. If teachers just had kids listen and try to make conversation in Spanish every class, they would learn the language much quicker.
best explanation thanks
The DOP and IOP are the hardest bit of Spanish so far for me
You explain it very well, but I’m going to need a lot of practice to get it in my thick skull
Thank you! It's important to watch multiple videos on the same subject, as some cover things others don't, or say it in a way that makes more sense. I picked up several things from this video that cemented my knowledge. Appreciate the video!
OMG I understood everything in 7 minutes. I have beem stressed out with DOPs and IOPs. Thank you so much! I'll definitely watch it again later in the morning because it's already 1am here.
Whos spanish teacher brought them here👁👄👁
Mine we are watching it on zoom rn
thanks so much this helped me understand how most direct object pronouns work what about :me:
Her pronunciation is so immaculate! great job!
found you but y would u stick bug me lmao
Muchas gracias por su ayuda 🙏🏻😊!
Please make a separate playlist for grammar
And also a video of both dop and IOP! Together
Here you go! ua-cam.com/video/O47ZY8VoATc/v-deo.html
Thank you so much for explaining this so clearly!
Thanks these videos helped a lot I got a 70% at the test at the end #selfgraded
¡Gracias señora!
It's very easy to understand ❤. More videos to come ❤
Thank you so much
Why did u leave. Come back after 7 months. U will help a lot of people learn Spanish and French. You are very accomplished.
We want to! But the day job comes first :-/
Very helpful. Thank you!
So clear and simple. Thank you
TYSM!
Brilliant 👏
thanks
You are an awesome teacher
Why did you remove the (r) in Comprarlas to cómpralas?
Since we are changing the meaning from indicative (telling what is happening) to a command (telling someone what to do), we have to change the verb form. We don't yet have a video for command formation, but long story short, the informal command for "comprar" is "compra."
Aaaaand a million years later, here's a new video for that concept! ua-cam.com/video/81D9J8aLqrE/v-deo.html
What program are you using for 1:32 and 1:42
Excellent
Brilliant video - you made this difficult subject really simple. I'd love to see another video which combines direct and indirect pronouns too as I'm really struggling with that!
Ask and you shall receive! ua-cam.com/video/O47ZY8VoATc/v-deo.html
very clean video, i would have done it in the same style. very epic.
Merçi énormément!
What are the steps for Direct Object pronouns?
A1
very helpful! ¡Gracias por tu ayuda!
Hello I had a question about number 9 at the end. Pon los tendores aqui.
I know that 'los' in the sentence is the article and 'tenedores' is the noun we are replacing, but 'pon' is the conjugated verb form of Poner. So why in this instance is the DOP placement switched? Shouldn't it be Los pon aqui? Or alternatively Poner los aqui?
Because the rules state that the DOP goes either BEFORE the conjugated verb OR it is tacked on to the end of the infinitive, but here it is tacked on to the end of the conjugated verb
I don't know if I am missing something, so if someone could clear this up for me I would really appreciate it!
Good question! Yes, you are missing something :)
Have another look at 2:32. "Pon" is an affirmative command, so the object gets attached. Commands require some changes to match subjects, but they are imperative, not declarative (or more simply, they are telling someone what to do, not telling/narrating what they are doing)... so we don't think of them as "conjugated." Commands are treated differently than normal conjugations, and for placement, that puts them into the "B" category! Hope that helps.
@@LingoLearner thank you!! I understand now!!
@@LingoLearner thank you!! I understand now!!
LITERALLY THANK YOU SO MUCH
Hey please continue this course.
Great job thanks
Great vid thanks 👏👏👏
Thank you so much 😊
Saved my grade
no.
And the hand moving at 4:52 it’s brilliant
Moovly :-)
thanks for the help!
What if there's no name, like "visitamos la casa de mi abuela"
Hopefully you've identified the direct object as "la casa de mi abuela." The word "casa" (house) is singular and feminine. When you exchange that phrase for the singular feminine DOP, you get "la." Visitamos is conjugated, so the DOP goes before it. The end result is "La visitamos."