In Spanish, an indirect object pronoun usually comes before a conjugated verb, while a direct object pronoun can come either before a conjugated verb or be attached to an infinitive or gerund.
The reflexive pronoun usually goes before the conjugated verb in Spanish. For example, "Me levanto" (I get up).
In Spanish, "yo soy" means "I am" and is used when emphasizing or clarifying the subject of the sentence. On the other hand, "soy" also means "I am" but is a more common and general way of expressing the same idea. Both forms are correct and depend on the context and emphasis desired.
The pronoun 'her' is the objective case.In the example sentence, the pronoun 'her' is functioning as the object of the preposition 'to'.Whenever you see the word "to" followed by a pronoun, you have an OBJECT, usually called an indirect object. My husband gave a birthday gift to me. I showed the painting to them. (A direct object has no preposition... no word like "to" or "with" or "about". For example: My husband gave me a gift. I showed them the painting.)
A reflexive pronoun usually comes after the verb in a sentence. For example:Dad made himself some breakfast.Dad made some breakfast himself.When the reflexive pronoun comes directly after the subject of the sentence, it is called an intensive pronoun, used for emphasis. For example:Dad himself made breakfast.
No, the word 'usually' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Examples:Jack usually walks to work. (the adverb 'usually' modifies the verb 'walks')Today he took the bus. (the pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'Jack')
poder, when conjugated, usually is translated as "can". Puedo enviar una carta. I can mail a letter. A can, as in "tin can" would be el bidón.
A reflexive pronoun usually comes after the verb in a sentence. For example:Dad made himself some breakfast.Dad made some breakfast himself.When the reflexive pronoun comes directly after the subject of the sentence, it is called an intensive pronoun, used for emphasis. For example:Dad himself made breakfast.
You can often leave out the subject pronoun in Spanish because of the way the verbs are conjugated. There are separate endings for I, you, he/her/you(formal), we, and them/you all. Since some of the endings belong to only one pronoun, you don't need to put in the pronoun. Take -ar verbs. They are verbs ending in -ar, such as caminar, escuchar, and cantar. Their conjugations are the same each time. In order, for yo, tú, él/ella/usted, nosotros, and ellos/ellas/ustedes: -o, -as, -a, -amos, -an. You replace the -ar with one of those, depending on the subject pronoun. You can leave out the subject pronoun for those verbs because you can usually determine by the verb ending what the pronoun is. If the verb is "miro", then the pronoun must be "yo," because the ending -o only goes with the subject "yo." The same thing for "cenamos." The pronoun must be "nosotros", because the ending -amos only goes with the subject "nosotros."
"Reading a book" is "leyendo un libro." Usually this would be combined with a conjugated form of "estar", such as "Estoy leyendo un libro", or "I am reading a book."
In Spanish, "yo soy" means "I am" and is used when emphasizing or clarifying the subject of the sentence. On the other hand, "soy" also means "I am" but is a more common and general way of expressing the same idea. Both forms are correct and depend on the context and emphasis desired.
The pronoun 'her' is the objective case.In the example sentence, the pronoun 'her' is functioning as the object of the preposition 'to'.Whenever you see the word "to" followed by a pronoun, you have an OBJECT, usually called an indirect object. My husband gave a birthday gift to me. I showed the painting to them. (A direct object has no preposition... no word like "to" or "with" or "about". For example: My husband gave me a gift. I showed them the painting.)
Ardor
An emphatic pronoun is used for emphasis or to reinforce the subject in a sentence (e.g., "I myself will take care of it"), while a reflexive pronoun is used when the subject and object are the same (e.g., "She hurt herself").
"reading" in Spanish is "leyendo". It is usually combined with a conjugated form of the verb "estar". "Estoy leyendo el libro" would be "I am reading the book". This form (present progressive) is not used all that often in Spanish, at least compared with English. More often you would see "Leo el libro", which would commonly be translated as "I am reading the book."
Just ask. If you try to be indirect, you may get an indirect answer.
a pronoun usually refers to a word that comes before it, the antecendent gives the pronoun its meaning
The interrogative pronoun is who.The antecedent(s) for an interrogative pronoun is usually the answer to the question.Note: Another pronoun in the sentence is 'our', a possessive adjective used to describe the noun 'senators'.