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When to use the verb "Ser" and when to use "Estar"This is the place for questions about conjugations, verb tenses, adverbs, adjectives, word order, syntax and other grammar questions for English or Spanish. |
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#41
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Be seated at theater (instead of standing) Be seated by your host. |
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#42
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Huh??
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- Lou Ann, de Washington, DC, USA Específicamente quiero recibir ayuda con el español de latinoamerica. ¡Muchísimas gracias! |
#43
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La leche es buena para los huesos. Estar only can refer to attributes of the subject, but mainly it's not a verbo sustantivo (what is beyond obvious; the beyond part being the important one) Quote:
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I don't know "ser sentado" with that exact meaning. It could be "ser sensato" (to have good sense) or "ser sentado" (dated: to be thoughtful, wise). Your question involves the fact that sentado as an adjective is more than sentado as a participle. DRAE is a good guide as you won't find "abrazado" in it because as an adjective it gets the meaning from "abrazar", but when a past participle has gotten its own meanings, you will find it in DRAE, as it happens with "sentar" and "sentado".
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Sorry, no English spell-checker Last edited by aleCcowaN; March 21, 2011 at 05:40 AM. |
#44
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I said only correct because i was agreeing with you, and told you that could use it like when you see the taxi driver is going to go past your home. If you ask at that moment the driver which one is your home we won't know, just it is somewhere very near. (that is with "es aquí") whereas, with "this is my house" the driver knows exactly which one. Does that make sense? Wouldn't it be the same in English "it's here" and "this is my house/home"? Quote:
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Please explain. Thanks. Hernan. |
#45
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Just a small point, but the substantive verb never has an object, just a complement in the same grammatical case as the subject.
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#46
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Thank you. I guessed it was an O as in DO -in Spanish, CD-
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Sorry, no English spell-checker |
#47
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I'm not sure that you were agreeing with *me*, but with the person who I was quoting. I was only quoting these authors when asking these questions because I don't UNDERSTAND what they've said. So I quote an author and then say "I don't understand this quote" and then I'm told that the quote is correct. I just don't understand WHY "mi casa es aquí" is better than "mi casa está aquí". Quote:
Neither. I have no idea what your getting at with those two sentences. You say "consider the following...", and I agree that those two sentences are English sentences using the word "seated", but have no idea what they have to do with my original question.
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- Lou Ann, de Washington, DC, USA Específicamente quiero recibir ayuda con el español de latinoamerica. ¡Muchísimas gracias! |
#48
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The first one states a somewhat general location of the home, but the second states it exactly where it is actually. The last two sentences about "seated" will have to wait. |
#49
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Tell me - you use "estar" with "muerto", but you use "ser" with "calvo", right? "Está muerto ese hombre." "Es calvo ese hombre." Right?
Setting aside any possible jokes that can be made here ... it has made sense to me that death is the end of a process, thus the use of "estar". But isn't baldness the end of a process in the same way, too?
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- Lou Ann, de Washington, DC, USA Específicamente quiero recibir ayuda con el español de latinoamerica. ¡Muchísimas gracias! |
#50
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Ser calvo is a definitive characteristic.
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estar, ser, ser vs estar, vocab comparison, vs |
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