Spanish/Lesson 6
Grammar - Object Pronouns
editDirect Object Pronouns
editWhile the subject of a sentence initiates an action (the verb), the direct object is the one that is affected by the action. A direct object pronoun is used to refer to the direct object of a previous sentence:
El chico come la manzana. |
The boy eats the apple . |
The following table shows the six types of direct object pronouns:
Subject | Object | English |
yo | me | me |
tú | te | you |
él | lo | him/it |
ella | la | her/it |
usted | lo/la | you |
nosotros | nos | us, we |
vosotros | os | you (plural) |
ellos | los | them (masculine) |
ellas | las | them (feminine) |
ustedes | los/las | you |
In spanish tú is used for informal situations, and usted must be used when a formal treatment is needed.
Note: In Spain, le and les are used as the masculine direct object pronoun only when referring to people. If the antecedent of a direct object is masculine but non-human, lo or los are used instead. In most other Spanish speaking places, lo and los are used instead of le and les.
Indirect Object Pronouns
editAn indirect object is an object that would be asked for with To whom...? or From whom...?. It is called indirect because it occurs usually together with a direct object which is affected directly by the action:
La mujer da una manzana al chico. |
The woman gives an apple to the boy . |
The apple is given by the woman (direct). The boy gets the given apple (indirect - depends on the apple being given).
Here is a table with all of the Spanish indirect object pronouns:
Subject | Indirect Object | English |
yo | me | to/from me |
tú | te | to/from you |
él/ella/usted | le | to/from him/her/you |
nosotros/nosotras | nos | to/from us |
vosotros/vosotras | os | to/from you |
ellos/ellas/ustedes | les | to/from them/you |
Position Of Object Pronouns (Double Object Pronouns)
editSo far we have only seen sentences with one object pronoun. If there is both a direct and an indirect object pronoun, the indirect pronoun usually comes first:
Te compro una bicicleta . |
I buy you a bike. |
Also, when both object pronouns are in the third person (either singular or plural), the indirect pronoun changes from le/les to se:
El profesor le da unos libros. |
The professor gives her the books. |
In sentences that contain an infinitive or a participle, the object pronoun may be either placed before the conjugated verb or it maybe attached to the infinitive/participle:
Carmen puede cantar el himno nacional. |
Carmen can sing the national anthem. |
It is possible to have the two rules above working at the same time: A combination of direct and indirect pronouns that is attached to an infinitive/participle:
Quiero mostrarte una casa. |
I want to show you a house. |
Exercise:Object Pronouns
Vocabulario (Vocabulary) - La comida (Food)
editLas comidas | The meals |
---|---|
el desayuno | breakfast |
desayunar, tomar el desayuno | to have breakfast |
el almuerzo | lunch |
almorzar | to have lunch |
la cena | dinner |
cenar | to have dinner |
la comida | food, meal |
comer | to eat |
In Spain and some other countries, comida is the midday meal.
Las comidas | The meals |
---|---|
el desayuno | breakfast |
desayunar, tomar el desayuno | to have breakfast |
la comida (el almuerzo) | lunch, main meal |
comer (almorzar) | to eat, to lunch |
la cena | dinner |
cenar | to have dinner |
In other countries, for example Chile, comida is the last meal in the day.
Las comidas | The meals |
---|---|
el desayuno | breakfast |
desayunar, tomar el desayuno | to have breakfast |
el almuerzo | lunch |
almorzar | to have lunch |
la comida (la cena) | dinner, main meal |
comer (cenar) | to eat, to have dinner |
Instead of saying desayuno, comida y cena (Spain) or desayuno, almuerzo y comida (Chile, Colombia), it's safer to say desayuno, almuerzo y cena.
The word comida has several meanings
- food Me gusta la comida mexicana
- meal El desayuno es la principal comida del día
- lunch La comida es a las 2 PM
- dinner La comida es a las 9 PM
Las Frutas | Fruits |
---|---|
la banana | banana |
el plátano (Spain, Chile, Perú) | |
el banano | |
la cereza | cherry |
la guinda | |
el damasco | apricot |
el albaricoque (Spain) | |
el durazno (Sp. Am) | peach |
el melocotón (Spain) | |
la fresa | strawberry |
la frutilla (Argentina, Chile, Uruguay) | |
el kiwi | kiwi fruit |
la manzana | apple |
la naranja | orange |
la pera | pear |
la piña | pineapple |
el ananá | |
la uva | grape |
la ciruela | plum |
Las Verduras | Vegetables |
---|---|
la cebolla | onion |
la lechuga | lettuce |
la espinaca | spinach |
la papa (Sp. Am.) | potato |
la patata (Spain) | |
el pepino | cucumber |
el aguacate | avocado |
la palta (Argentina, Chile, Uruguay) | |
el tomate | tomato |
la zanahoria | carrot |
el zapallo (Argentina, Chile, Uruguay) | pumpkin, squash |
la calabaza (Spain) | |
los porotos (Argentina, Chile, Uruguay) | beans |
los frijoles (Mexico) | |
las alubias (Spain) | |
las caraotas |
Note that due to the pervasive influence of English, in many supermarkets there is a section called Vegetales instead of Verduras. They mistranslate vegetable, forgetting that this is not the same as English vegetal (relating to plants).
- Legumbres means the same thing as verduras (vegetables).