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When to use the verb "IR" and when to use "VENIR"Grammar questions– conjugations, verb tenses, adverbs, adjectives, word order, syntax, etc. |
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I just checked now and ir and venir both give wrong results
![]() 1st person: yo voy (I go/am going) yo vengo (I come/am coming) 2nd person: tu vas (you're going) tu vienes (you're coming) 2nd person (formal): usted va (you're going) usted viene (you're coming) 3rd person: el/ella va (he/she is going) el/ella viene (he/she is coming) For the second and third persons, I only put the singular version, not the plural.
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I have a question about vengo and I´m coming. As I´m learning new words, I have found words that, as I understand them, actually mean "I'm ________ing".
Estoy comiendo (I'm eating) Estoy nadando (I'm swimming) Él está corriendo (He's running) Does vengo really mean "I'm coming" or "I come" or both? Am I misunderstanding the use of the "endo/ando" words? Thanks, Brenda |
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thank you very much, it will help me a lot..God Bless.. ![]() |
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Hola.....
Endo/Ando endings.........means you are doing the action. Vengo..... I am wondering exactly what you mean? If someone calls out for me, Elaina!! I could respond, Vengo!! (I'm coming) which might not be the correct conjugation of the verb because vengo = I come and not I'm coming but this is probably the only instance where Vengo = I'm coming. Did I confuse you more? Elaina ![]() |
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The simple present tense in Spanish is the most common way of expressing the simple present AND the present progressive in English.
Voy a la tienda - I'm going to the store. However, you can use the present progressive in Spanish, when you're actually in the act of doing whatever it is you're doing at the moment. Estoy comiendo - I'm eating (right now I'm actually eating). There's also another dynamic with ir/venir that's different than English. IR is always used when the destination (yours or someone else's) is not the same as your current location, and VENIR is used when the destination (yours or someone else's) is the same as your current location Example: Someone knocks on the door and you call out: I'm coming! The destination (the door) is not the same as your current location, so you have to use ir. ¡Voy! It´s the same with traer and llevar.
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If you find something wrong with my Spanish, please correct it! |
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ir, ir vs venir, venir, vocab comparison, vs |
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