When followed by lo, los, la, or las, le or les are replaced with se.
La is the correct direct object pronoun to complete the sentence. So the conversation would be: "Tuve que comprar unas sillas. ¿Dónde las compraste?"
The direct object recieves the action of the verb. It answers the question "what?"For example: She finished her homework. Homework=the direct object. If you wanted to make it shorter and say "she finished it," "it" would be the direct object pronoun.In Spanish, "Ella terminó la tarea." The direct object pronoun comes before the verb you would change it to say, "Ella la terminó."me=mete=youlo/la=his/her/itnos=uslos/las=them
"Las palabras" is Spanish for "the words."
A las oho doesn't mean anything. If you meant a las ocho it means "at 8" normally meaning time
"Las calles" translates to "the streets" in English.
The correct direct object pronoun for Yo compro las joyas en la joyeria is: las and it replaces: joyas. The replacement sentence is: Yo las compro en la joyeria.
me/ te/ le/ nos/ os/ les
"A las" usually means "at" and is often followed by a number. "A las 8" = "at 8:00"
Usted / la / lo / le ustedes / les / los / las tú / ti / te vosotros, as / os Yo
La is the correct direct object pronoun to complete the sentence. So the conversation would be: "Tuve que comprar unas sillas. ¿Dónde las compraste?"
he used gov ideas and followed techniques that enlightmeters did he explored and made las and followed same government Save
You say it that way because in Spanish the adjectives and articles have to agree in gender and number with the noun(s) or pronoun(s). "Es la una" is a reference to a femininenoun or pronoun. That being the case, uno, being a masculine singular adjective, is incorrect, because it fails to agree in gender, even though it agrees in number (singular). Another reason is that, when telling time, they are las horas, the hours, and they are all feminine: la una, las dos , las tres, las cuatro, etc.
SPA: gustan las frutas The translation to English depends on the context: ENG: Do you the like fruits? ENG: Would you like fruit?
The direct object recieves the action of the verb. It answers the question "what?"For example: She finished her homework. Homework=the direct object. If you wanted to make it shorter and say "she finished it," "it" would be the direct object pronoun.In Spanish, "Ella terminó la tarea." The direct object pronoun comes before the verb you would change it to say, "Ella la terminó."me=mete=youlo/la=his/her/itnos=uslos/las=them
Her, as in Her parents gave her her name, is "su" as the possessive adjective before parents and name, and "le" as the indirect object of gave. It depends on how you use it. As an accusative pronoun "le (a ella)": Voy a darle esto a ella / le voy a dar esto a ella. ( I'm going to give this to her.) As an indirect object pronoun: "la". Conozco a María. La amo. (I know Maria. I love her).
María y Ana = ellas, les, las (In Spanish)The pronoun for the compound subject (in English) Maria and Ana is they as the subject and them as the object of a sentence; for example:Maria and Ana are coming to lunch. They are expected at one. Mother may come with them.
The word 'stereo' is not a proper noun or a pronoun. The word 'stereo' is a common noun, a word for any stereo of any kind, anywhere.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing; for example:Blaupunkt Car Stereo Speakers and ReceiversStereo Plus (retail store), Las Vegas, NVA pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronoun that takes the place of the noun stereo is 'it'. Example:The stereo is new, it was a gift.