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It was so close.Translate a sentence or longer piece of text. For single words or idioms, use the vocabulary forum. |
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It was so close.
English/French bilingual here, but very little knowledge of Spanish. Having trouble determining the correct translation of a rather simple sentence, and was hoping for a little help.
The sentence is, "It was so close." Translation engines have provided me with, "Que estaba tan cerca", "Estaba tan cerca", and similar possibilities. But examining the conjugation of the verb ser, it would appear the proper translation would be "Fue tan cerca." The dialect would be Mexican Spanish, if that makes a difference, and the thing being referenced is of indeterminate sex (neutral, instead of masculine or feminine). Can anyone help here (and if possible, explain why there is such variance in the possible translations)? Much thanks! ![]() |
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I was hoping I had anticipated that.
![]() The full context is of a Mexican female, who is describing being startled by something she saw. She can't identify exactly what she saw, despite being separated from it by only a few feet. So it was a tangible object in near proximity, to answer your first question. She is describing the incident to another person after the fact, and makes this observation about how close the unknown object was during their discussion. So for your second question, I believe you would consider the incident as already having happened and now over. Gotta love the intricacies of language. ![]() |
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"...so close" marks position or location, so "to be/être" has to come from "estar" and not from "ser". "Estuvo tan cerca" or "estaba tan cerca" depends on the meaning of the phrase in the context of the paragraph.
"Estaba tan cerca" sounds like it's part of the telling of a story and this bit is describing its physical context. "Estuvo tan cerca" sounds as a conclusion, to wrap the story up or express the relief it's over and the potential unknown risk is gone.
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Thank you!
Odd—the forums are suddenly not allowing me to quote the previous message. So we'll do it the hard way:
Quote:
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For this case, it seems to me that the tense difference is the same between "c'était" and "ça a été", so I think you can choose easily what is better for your story.
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C'est vrai, AngelicaDeAlquezar. I'm beginning to think I should have listened to my college French teacher, who encouraged me to take Spanish as a third language. I declined, saying I'd never have any need for it.
![]() Again, thanks for the help, all! ![]() |
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estaba, fue, ser |
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