| bio | website | |
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| location | ||
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 1 year |
| seen | Jan 15 at 9:42 | |
| stats | profile views | 0 |
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May 18 |
answered | Is “$5 pesos” proper form in Spanish? |
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May 18 |
answered | Distinguishing “quiz” and “test” |
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May 18 |
answered | Uso de “concernidos” |
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May 15 |
comment |
When is the indirect object pronoun required in sentences with an indirect object? Now it's me who has a doubt lol. In that case, as JoulSauron says (i agree at 99%), what happens whith, for example, this case: "El libro pertenece a él"?. Because you can say "El libro pertenece a Pedro", but not "El libro pertenece a él". |
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May 14 |
comment |
When is the indirect object pronoun required in sentences with an indirect object? 1) Sorry, i used "subject" in an ambiguous context; i don't mean subject as the subject of the sentence, just a subject in general, like a noun. |
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May 14 |
comment |
When is the indirect object pronoun required in sentences with an indirect object? jrdioko -> No; that's correct. Because is a different scenario: There you are using a subject ("tu biblioteca"), whilst in the question, we are talking about using it with pronouns ("mi,ti, etc."). You could even say "Pertenece a mi persona", since "mi persona" would be the subject. That's correct, because there you are using "mi" (as opposite to "mí") as determinative possessive. Notice the difference between "MI" and "MÍ" |
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May 14 |
comment |
When is the indirect object pronoun required in sentences with an indirect object? JoulSauron -> Yep, exactly. |
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May 13 |
answered | When is the indirect object pronoun required in sentences with an indirect object? |
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May 13 |
awarded | Supporter |
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May 8 |
awarded | Teacher |
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May 8 |
awarded | Editor |
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May 8 |
revised |
Complemento vs. Suplemento added 333 characters in body |
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May 8 |
answered | Complemento vs. Suplemento |