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Estuve for "went"?Grammar questions– conjugations, verb tenses, adverbs, adjectives, word order, syntax, etc. |
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#2
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Yo tampoco, en los libros de enseñanza se dan dos circunstacias opuestas:
1) Traducen literalmente y engañan al aprediz. 2) Traducen sin literalidad alguna y falsean la gramática. "Estuve" marca un estado, "fui a" (ir), una acción; como en inglés con "went". Un saludo. |
#3
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I think the reason for this is that they're not exactly translating, but using the sentence that would be more frequent in both languages. As for the meaning, Julvenzor is right; I might just add that "estuve" lets the speaker focus on the experience of being there and "fui" reduces emphasis on the fact that I spent time there choosing the item I bought.
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#4
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I agree 100% that you shouldn't translate something literally, word-for-word, instead you should translate the meaning. But in this case, the translation is wrong. It's very similar, but it's wrong.
Ayer estuve en la tienda... = I was at/in the store yesterday... Ayer fui a la tienda... = I went to the store yesterday...
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