BullShifter5000
May 19, 2020, 11:32 AM
Hello,
When I look up the phrase “can he walk?” in a Spanish dictionary, it’s always “¿Puede caminar?” However, I was watching Live PD, and the officer was talking to a woman in Spanish about her son, and he asked her (in Spanish) “can he walk?” (I know this because of the subtitles). There weren’t Spanish subtitles so I don’t know exactly what he said in Spanish, but it sounded like he said “¿sí camina él?”
My question is, first of all, what do you think he could’ve possibly said? And second of all, how come he didn’t use the verb “poder”? Are there different ways to say the same verb that schools and dictionaries don’t tell?
Hopefully this makes sense. If not, I’ll expound.
Thank you!
When I look up the phrase “can he walk?” in a Spanish dictionary, it’s always “¿Puede caminar?” However, I was watching Live PD, and the officer was talking to a woman in Spanish about her son, and he asked her (in Spanish) “can he walk?” (I know this because of the subtitles). There weren’t Spanish subtitles so I don’t know exactly what he said in Spanish, but it sounded like he said “¿sí camina él?”
My question is, first of all, what do you think he could’ve possibly said? And second of all, how come he didn’t use the verb “poder”? Are there different ways to say the same verb that schools and dictionaries don’t tell?
Hopefully this makes sense. If not, I’ll expound.
Thank you!