Madrigals Magic Key to Spanish (159 page)

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Authors: Margarita Madrigal

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BOOK: Madrigals Magic Key to Spanish
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Remember that the past participle is also used as an adjective (with masculine, feminine, singular, and plural endings).

EXAMPLES
:

un huevo frito,
a fried egg

huevos fritos,
fried eggs

La puerta está abierta.
The door is open
.

Está satisfecho.
He is satisfied
.

Está satisfecha.
She is satisfied
.

Está muerto.
He is dead
.

Está muerta.
She is dead
.

un paquete envuelto,
a wrapped package

Las puertas están abiertas.
The doors are open
.

Están satisfechos.
They are satisfied
.

unos paquetes envueltos,
some wrapped packages

VERBS THAT END IN “
UIR”

When verbs end in “uir” the letter “y” is inserted in the following manner:

CONSTRUIR,
to build, to construct

PRESENT

PRETERITE

PRESENT SUBJUNCTIVE

PAST SUBJUNCTIVE

PRESENT PARTICIPLE
:

construyendo,
building
estoy construyendo,
I am building

In the following verbs the “y” is inserted as in the sample verb above.

reconstruir,
to reconstruct
excluir,
to exclude
destruir,
to destroy
incluir,
to include
distribuir,
to distribute
huir,
to flee, to run away
instruir,
to instruct
concluir,
to conclude
substituir,
to substitute
atribuir,
to attribute
contribuir,
to contribute
constituir,
to constitute
disminuir,
to diminish
diluir,
to dilute
IMPERSONAL VERBS

Impersonal verbs are verbs in which no person acts. These verbs are used only in the singular third man form.

LLOVER, to
rain

PRESENT
LLUEVE,
it rains
;
LLUEVE MUCHO,
it rains a lot
PRETERITE
LLOVIÓ,
it rained
;
LLOVIÓ MUCHO,
it rained a lot
IMPERFECT
LLOVÍA,
it used to rain
FUTURE
VA A LLOVER,
it is going to rain
FUTURE
LLOVERÁ,
it will rain
PRESENT PERFECT
HA LLOVIDO,
it has rained
PRESENT PROGRESSIVE
ESTÁ LLOVIENDO,
it is raining
PAST PROGRESSIVE
ESTABA LLOVIENDO,
it was raining
NEVAR,
to snow
PRESENT
NIEVA,
it snows
PRETERITE
NEVÓ,
it snowed
IMPERFECT
NEVABA,
it used to snow
FUTURE
VA A NEVAR,
it is going to snow
FUTURE
NEVARÁ,
it will snow
PRESENT PERFECT
HA NEVADO,
it has snowed
PRESENT PROGRESSIVE
ESTÁ NEVANDO,
it is snowing
PAST PROGRESSIVE
ESTABA NEVANDO,
it was snowing
HABER,
to be
PRESENT
HAY,
there is, there are, is there? are there?
PRETERITE
HUBO,
there was, there were, was there? were there?
IMPERFECT
HABÍA,
there used to be, did there used to be?
FUTURE
VA A
HABER,
there is going to be, there are going to be, is there going to be? are there going to be?
FUTURE
HABRÁ,
there will be, will there be?
PRESENT PERFECT
HA HABIDO,
there has been, there have been
PRESENT SUBJUNCTIVE
HAYA
PAST SUBJUNCTIVE
HUBIERA
USES OF
DEBER, OUGHT, SHOULD, MUST

“Deber” is a regular verb

“Deber” is an auxiliary verb that must be followed by an infinitive.

Debo estudiar.
I ought to study
.

Pablo debe estar en Cuba.
Paul must be in Cuba
.

Debemos ir al concierto.
We should go to the concert
.

Deben pagar la cuenta.
They should pay the bill
.

Debe ser muy difícil.
It must be very difficult
.

No debe ser fácil.
It must not be easy
.

Debe haber ido al despacho.
He must have gone to the office
.

Debe haber estudiado.
He must have studied
.

PASSIVE VOICE

The passive voice is used much more in English than it is in Spanish.

In English you say, “I was invited to a party,” and you don’t say who invited you. In Spanish we prefer an active subject, so we use the figurative “they” and say, “They invited me to a party.”
“Me invitaron a una fiesta.”
This still doesn’t say who invited you, but the implication that “they” invited you gives the sentence a much needed subject.

EXAMPLES
:

The ships were painted
. Pintaron los barcos. (
“They” painted the ships
.)

The rooms were cleaned
. Limpiaron los cuartos. (
“They” cleaned the rooms
.)

The clothes were washed
. Lavaron la ropa. (
“They” washed the clothes
.)

The house was bought
. Compraron la casa. (
“They” bought the house
.)

NEGATIVES AND DOUBLE NEGATIVES
nada,
nothing
ninguno,
no one
nadie,
nobody
jamás,
never

The word “no” when it appears before a noun:

MASCULINE
FEMININE
ningún
ninguna
ningunos
ningunas

EXAMPLES
:

ningún hombre,
no man
ninguna mujer,
no woman
ningunos hombres,
no men
ningunas mujeres,
no women

In Spanish the double negative is the correct grammatical construction for sentences beginning with the word “no.”

EXAMPLES
:

No ví nada.
I didn’t see anything
(
I didn’t see nothing
).

No oí nada.
I didn’t hear anything
(
I didn’t hear nothing
).

No ví a nadie.
I didn’t see anyone
(
I didn’t see no one
).

No hablé con ninguno.
I didn’t talk to anyone
(
I didn’t talk to no one
).

No hice nada.
I didn’t do anything
(
I didn’t do nothing
).

THE
INTIMATE FORM OF ADDRESS

n Spanish there is an intimate form of address that is used with members of your family and close friends. In this case the pronoun “usted” (
you
) becomes “tú” (
thou
) and the verbs change their endings.

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