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Por Vs Durante

 

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  #1  
Old April 28, 2020, 02:10 AM
fglorca fglorca is offline
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Por Vs Durante

When do we use ‘por’, when do we use ‘durante’, and when can we omit the preposition altogether? Some textbooks tell me they are always interchangeable, but I don’t agree.
Some examples:

I think ‘durante’ and the omission of the preposition are grammatically fine here, but I’m not sure of the word order of the second one in each case:

• Estuve en Madrid durante dos meses.
• Estuve durante dos meses en Madrid.

• Estuve en Madrid dos meses.
• Estuve dos meses en Madrid.

Could we use ‘por’ here? I don’t think we can, but I don’t know the rule:
• Estuve en Madrid por dos meses.
• Estuve por dos meses en Madrid.

Similar pairs of examples:

• Trabajaré en Sevilla durante quince días.
• Trabajaré durante quince días en Sevilla.

• Trabajaré en Sevilla quince días.
• Trabajaré quince días en Sevilla.

• Trabajaré en Sevilla por quince días.
• Trabajaré por quince días en Sevilla.

Different examples below in that I don’t think we can use ‘durante’, and I don’t think we can omit ‘por’. However, my main issue is that I don’t know a specific reason as to why.

• Me invitó a su casa durante un mes.
• Me invitó durante un mes a su casa.

• Me invitó a su casa un mes.
• Me invitó un mes a su casa.

• Me invitó a su casa por un mes.
• Me invitó por un mes a su casa.

Any help with this, specifically a concrete rule, would be hugely appreciated.
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  #2  
Old April 28, 2020, 03:52 PM
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I don't think the word order in the case of estuve en Madrid dos meses/ estuve dos meses en Madrid. Here's why: Substitute the verb pasar (I believe would be a more common usage) for estar and you will note that they are both OK.

Also durante and por seem very interchangeable in the cases you quote, but durante can be used for other things that diverge from por. Example: Durante el mes de junio las noches son breves.
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Old April 29, 2020, 09:30 PM
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AngelicaDeAlquezar AngelicaDeAlquezar is offline
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I agree with Poli. The word order makes no difference. A speaker may prefer one or the other, depending on what they have in mind at the moment.
This is not a rule and the speaker may not be conscious of it, but normally if you say first "en Madrid", you prefer to stress the place, and if you say first "(durante/por) dos meses", the time you spent there is more important.
We also take into account how the sentence sounds in our ears, so we choose as we like better.


As for "por" and "durante" being interchangeable... hmm... I'd like to complicate things a little.

1) Let me be a little evil here: in the dictionary, "por" is not associated with any notion of time, except an unrelated one, to talk about an approximate date:
– Juan me va a pagar el dinero por junio. -> Juan will pay me back the money by June.
– Creo que la última vez que nos vimos fue por Navidad. -> I think the last time we met it was around Christmas.
But don't worry! You may still say "trabajé en Madrid durante dos meses" and "trabajé en Madrid por dos meses", with exactly the same meaning, and everyone understands. Because of the influence of English, most native speakers will find natural the sentence with "por". In this context, both prepositions are perfectly interchangeable.

2) When you have a verb like "estar", which already expresses some notion of duration, some of us might prefer no preposition:
- Estuve en Madrid dos meses.
You may perfectly say "estuve en Madrid durante dos meses" or "estuve en Madrid por dos meses; it's not wrong at all. Some of us, pedantic ones, would rather omit the preposition.
- Permaneció inmóvil varios minutos.



I'll add a little nuance here: if you don't have a specific unit of time, we will want "durante":
- Estuve allá durante la guerra.
- Estuvimos en casa durante la primavera.
In these cases, we don't use "por", because in that case, the preposition introduces the cause why people have been in some place, rather than the period of time they have been there.


3) Finally, "durante" implies simultaneity. For example, you are in a place while the period of time occurs. So, we'd rather not use "durante" with a verb like "invitar", because you can't invite someone for a loooong period of time; that's an action that happens only once:
- Me invitó a su casa un mes.
- Me invitó a estar (durante/por) un mes en su casa.
- Me invitó a pasar un mes en su casa.
- Me invitó a quedarme (durante/por) un mes en su casa.

I think "me invitó a su casa por un mes" is alright, because the notion of "por" is immediately associated to the time expressed in the sentence rather than the nature of the verb, but I would definitely not use "durante" here for the reason I told before.
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Old May 01, 2020, 02:37 AM
fglorca fglorca is offline
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Many thanks, guys, really appreciate all your help.
Just one final question:

Estuve allí por dos horas.

I have heard once before that we can't use 'por' with 'hours', that is grammatically incorrect (even though 'durante' or no preposition at all is preferred here).
Is this true?
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Old May 01, 2020, 12:59 PM
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AngelicaDeAlquezar AngelicaDeAlquezar is offline
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"Por" here is alright. As I said, only if you stick to the dictionary, you will have a problem with it. But most native speakers are already familiar with this use of "por" and might even find "durante" a little pompous.


- Por la cuarentena veo la tele (por/durante) horas y horas.
- Ponga la masa en el congelador (por/durante) una hora.
- El perro estuvo dormido al sol (por/durante) horas.
- No es bueno trabajar frente a la computadora (por/durante) ocho horas seguidas.
- Si no puedes dormir (por/durante) 20 minutos, tómate un té caliente.
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