poli
April 01, 2011, 08:39 AM
In reading I came across this term an from context it seemed to mean
even though
aleCcowaN
April 01, 2011, 09:50 AM
Do you have any example? ("Que" isn't part of it)
"Incluso" means "even" or "too", depending on the context, but it always has a value of "top of the scale":
Dijo que lo patearía, que lo golpearía ... incluso que lo mataría.
Había equilibristas, malabaristas e incluso un elefante danzarín.
Departing of that "top of the scale" feature, you can use "incluso" to express concession:
Incluso si aumenta la oferta a 10.000$, aún así no se lo vendería.
(You have "even though" here)
Colloquial speech and regionalisms take control then and you may hear:
Incluso que aumentara la oferta
Incluso aumentando la oferta
Incluso y si aumentara la oferta
Incluso y todo que aumentara la oferta
and surely many more I've never heard.
Luna Azul
April 01, 2011, 04:38 PM
I agree context is needed here. A sentence would help.
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