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Help needed to explain reflexive verbsÉste es el lugar para preguntas sobre conjugaciones, tiempos verbales, adverbios, adjetivos, el orden de palabras, sintaxis y otras cuestiones gramaticales en español e inglés. |
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#1
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Help needed to explain reflexive verbs
I know that a reflexive verb is a verb where the action is performed against the subject itself. Or simply put, something I do myself or to myself.
I am struggling to understand the difference between the use of 2 verbs: subir and saltar when used in the following sentences: "Yo me subó a la mesa" - I climbed on the table. "Él saltó del velero" - I jumped from the sailboat Why is climbing (me subó) an action performed on oneself and jumping (saltó) is not? How does one climb oneself? Or, is the word "me" in the sentence being used as a direct object pronoun and not a reflective pronoun? |
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#2
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A reflexive verb is a subset of the pronominal verbs. (Not all pronominal verbs are reflexive verbs, but all reflexive verbs are pronominal verbs.)
The action of the verb reflects back on the subject when a reflexive verb is used. A pronominal verb can look exactly like a reflexive verb, but the action is not reflected back on the subject. The verb in your first sentence is not properly conjugated. It must be in the first person in order to be considered a proper context for the title of the thread. Your second sentence isn't translated correctly. It should say 'He jumped'. subir = to climb, go up, get on, get in, board, get on board subirse = to go to somebody's head, to go straight to somebody's head, to talk down to subirse = to get in or on saltar = to jump, leap saltarse = skip (fail to do something), go off (a diet or routine), break (a law) As you can see, subirse is not always reflexive. And saltarse is usually not used in a reflexive way. These are pronominal verbs. The meaning of 'me subà a la mesa' is a way to give emphasis to the fact that you got yourself up there. In other words, it denotes that you climbed it in a quick or awkward fashion. To simply say that you climbed up on the table, you can omit the pronoun (and the preposition). |
#3
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Me subà a la mesa [You are the source of power that lifted you there]
Salté por la borda (del velero) [You simply left gravity to do the trick] but Me caà por la borda [unlike the pretty impersonal account "caà por la borda", that "me" tells the event had severe personal consequences. Think of that like it is "me rompà el brazo" -I broke my arm-. In Spanish "rompà mi brazo" means you did it on purpose]
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pronomial verbs, reflexive verbs, saltar, subirse |
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