How to identify and use indirect object pronouns in Spanish - animated lesson for visual learners
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- Опубліковано 30 чер 2024
- Using indirect objects and their pronouns in Spanish is a bit different from using them in English. This lesson is designed to figure out which word in the sentence is the indirect object, then how to change that word from a noun to a pronoun. The full explanation is in English, with lots of examples in English and Spanish. Finally, lots of practice is provided, both guided and independent.
Link to subject pronoun explanation: • Spanish subject pronou...
Link to direct object pronoun explanation: • How to use and form di...
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All the videos of this channel are so well planned, explained, ordered. Really, you are doing a great social work, helping thousands from all over the world. Hope you never get tired and stop producing.
This is the greatest explanation I've seen. Thanks a lot!
Fantastic lesson. Easy to understand, with great use of graphics and clear rules for guidance.
Best explanation on UA-cam. Hands down.
This person has an incredible voice.
Brilliant explanation. Loved the visual aids! Thank you!
The best post on IOPs!
Thank you so much! I did not understand this concept while doing homework and you were very helpful!
All I can say is Wow! Perfect explanation
This was so helpful! Thanks.
Este video es muy claro y explicado bien. Es el mejor de este tema. ❤🎉 Mil gracias!
You are helping a lot. Thanks.
Excellent lesson, thank you very much!
very helpful, thank you!
Very helpful! Thank you❤
hard work and dedication
I'm new to direct object pronouns and indirect object pronoun. Can you use both I.O. pronouns and d.o. pronouns in a sentence. What would that look like?
Well Dario, you've hit a more advanced topic there. To summarize: yes, you can certainly use direct and indirect object pronouns together in a sentence. In Spanish, the IOP always comes first. "Querías mi opinión, y te la doy" means "You wanted my opinion, and I give it/I'm giving it to you" or literally, word for word, "to you it I give." HOWEVER when you have le or les in front of lo or la, the le/les changes to 'se' to avoid the double L sound. "Ella quería mi opinión, y se la doy" - "She wanted my opinion, and I give it/I'm giving it to her." So there's an extra little step for you there. We will eventually do a video on this concept!
@@LingoLearner my mind was blown just on direct object pronouns. I was always wondering what these lo las me le was in front of the verbs.
@@LingoLearner thank you. This year I decided to really tackle the Spanish grammar because the way I learned it was very much all over the place.
@@sifugurusensei If you're still working on it, I finally got a video out on combining IOPs and DOPs: ua-cam.com/video/O47ZY8VoATc/v-deo.html
Im curious, when given a choice of placement (for example when a sentece has both the main verb and an infinitive), which placement is most common in spoken spanish? Before the verb or attached at the end of the infinitive?
Hola! It's really and truly 50/50, but can possibly depend on the country:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_object_pronouns
www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-linguistic-geography/article/abs/macroregional-sociolinguistics-uses-and-preferences-on-null-direct-objects-in-spanish/95C060653480A3521C80376F7BD2E696
www.reddit.com/r/Spanish/comments/107y0ps/direct_object_pronoun_placement_popularity/
Hola! It's really and truly 50/50, but can possibly depend on the country:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_object_pronouns
www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-linguistic-geography/article/abs/macroregional-sociolinguistics-uses-and-preferences-on-null-direct-objects-in-spanish/95C060653480A3521C80376F7BD2E696
www.reddit.com/r/Spanish/comments/107y0ps/direct_object_pronoun_placement_popularity/
Merci
Just wow
Hola l have a qustion are
Me,te,le,nos,os,les (which this video was about)
The same as Me,te,lo,la,nos,os,los,las?
And what is the diffrence?
Hola! No, they are not the same. The ones you listed are direct (not indirect) object pronouns. Here's an explanation for those: ua-cam.com/video/GZSp8xxm-N0/v-deo.html
@@LingoLearner thanks 💗
How come you are not changing " una carta" to lo?
Una carta is the direct object, not indirect. This video is for indirect objects, so we're leaving direct ones alone for now. Also, since carta is feminine, if we DID change it to a pronoun, it would be 'la,' not 'lo.'
Here's a video for direct object pronouns: ua-cam.com/video/GZSp8xxm-N0/v-deo.html
And one for combining direct and indirect object pronouns: ua-cam.com/video/O47ZY8VoATc/v-deo.html
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
"I'm teaching sara". Sara is indirect object right?..... "I learn english from you" which one is the indirect object?
Good! "I'm teaching Sara" is like the example at 15:18. Sara is indeed indirect, because what you are teaching her (math? how to dance?) is the direct object. You could rephrase with the preposition ("I am teaching math to Sara"). For the second phrase, "you" is the indirect object. However, you would use a disjunctive pronoun instead of an indirect object pronoun, because you need to keep the preposition there for the sentence to make sense instead of replacing it. I know that seems complicated, so here's a page with further explanation: www.spanishdict.com/answers/133127/what-is-the-difference-between-te-tu-ti-
First comment!
I supose the french version is on its way..
Right!
I like toasters
Ok