Direct Objects and Direct Object Pronouns

 
Direct Objects, the Personal 
a
,
and Direct Object Pronouns
 
(Los complementos directos, la 
a
 personal,
y los pronombres de complemento
directo)
 
A 
direct object
 is a 
thing
 or 
person
 that
receives the direct action of the verb.
 
 I 
eat
 
the tamales
.
 
 Yo com
o
 
los tamales
.
 
Óscar kisse
s
 
his wife
.
 
Óscar bes
a
 a 
su esposa
.
 
Notice that direct objects that are 
people
 or
domesticated animals
 (and sometimes
personified things) are signaled by the p
ersonal
a
.
 
Ó
scar kisse
s
 
his
 wife
.
 
Óscar bes
a
 
a
 
su esposa
.
 
More information about the personal 
a
 follows on
the next slide.
 
I walk 
my dog
 every morning
.
 
Paseo 
a
 
mi
 
perro
 todas las mañanas.
 
Patriots love 
their country
.
 
Los patriotas aman 
a
 
su patria
.
 
Ó
scar 
has a very pretty wife.
 
Óscar 
tiene una esposa muy bonita.
 
We’re looking for an efficient secretary.
 
Buscamos una secretaria eficiente.
 
More on the personal 
a
 
Generally, the personal 
a
 is not used after
the verb 
tener
.
 
Nor is it used with a direct object that is an
unspecified or indefinite person.
 
Alicia visits the doctor.
 
Alicia visita 
al
 médico.
 
Whom is Elisa calling?
 
¿
A
 quién llama Elisa?
More on the personal 
a
 
The personal 
a
 followed by the definite
article 
el
 contracts to form 
al
.
 
When the interrogative 
quién(es)
 requests information
about the direct object, the personal 
a
 precedes it.
 
The personal 
a
 must be repeated before each human
direct object in a series.
 
Visito 
a
 Emilio y 
a
 Lola.
 
I visit Emilio and Lola.
 
A
 
direct object
 is 
a
 thing or person that
answers what or whom, respectively, in
the following equation:
 
 SUBJECT + VERB + 
WHAT
 (
WHOM
)
 
DIRECT OBJECT
 
Yo
 
com
o
 
los tamales
 
Identifying a direct object
 
Pronouns
 are particles (little words) that take the
place of the obj
e
ct itself, so that the object does
not have to be repeated ad nauseum . . .
Pronouns
 are particles (little words) that take
the place of the object itself, so that the
object does not have to be repeated ad
nauseum . . .
 
Notice how many times “the piano” was repeated.
Pronouns
 are particles (little words) that take
the place of the object itself, so that the
object does not have to be repeated ad
nauseum . . .
 
A better, more concise way is to use pronouns
instead of repeating the noun over and over.
 
Direct object
 pronouns
 in Spanish, just as in
English, take the place of the direct object
itself, so that the direct object does not have
to be repeated, and repeated, and repeated .
. .
 
The direct object pronouns in Spanish
are as follows:
 
me
 
te
 
lo, la
 
nos
 
os
 
los, las
 
 
These are used
exclusively
 
These are used
 
 I 
eat
 
the tamales
.
 
 Yo com
o
 
los tamales
.
 
 Yo 
los
 com
o
.
 
Notice that third-person direct object pronouns
agree in gender and number with the noun they
replace.
 
Now let’s see how pronouns replace
things
 or 
people
 that are direct objects.
 
Óscar kisse
s
 
his wife
.
 
Óscar bes
a
 a 
su
esposa
.
 
Óscar 
la
 bes
a
.
Notice that third-person direct object pronouns
agree in gender and number with the noun they
replace.
Now let’s see how pronouns replace
things
 or 
people
 that are direct objects.
 
 Óscar 
besa
 a su 
esposa
.
 
Notice that the personal 
a
 goes away
when the direct object 
noun
 is replaced
by a direct object 
pronoun
.
 
Óscar l
a besa
.
 
 Óscar 
l
a
 
besa
.
 
or 
after
 an 
infinitive
 or 
gerund
 (
present participle
).
 
(Óscar, 
bésa
l
a
.)
 
Óscar 
l
a
 va a besar.
 
Óscar va a besar
l
a
.
 
Óscar 
l
a
 está besando.
 
Óscar está besándo
l
a
.
 
(except for 
affirmative command forms
)
 
ALL object pronouns are placed either 
before
 a conjugated verb
 
PLACEMENT OF PRONOUNS
 
Direct object pronouns are commonly used in
conversation when the object is established or
known.  Again, this avoids needless repetition.
 
¿Dónde ves 
a Jorge
 y 
a Sarita
?
 
Where do you see Jorge
and Sarita?
 
Los
 veo en clase.
 
I see them in class.
 
¿Visitas 
a tu abuela
 con frecuencia?
 
Do you visit your
grandmother often?
 
Sí, 
la
 visito mucho.
 
Yes, I visit her a lot.
 
Do not be misled into thinking that 
los
 and 
la
 in the above answers are the subjects of
the sentences just because they appear in subject position.  The subject of both
answers, which is of course 
yo
, is simply not expressed in these instances.
 
Be aware that object pronouns, just like verbs, must
make a flip-flop transition when first and second
persons are involved in the conversation.
 
¿Me vas a invitar a tu fiesta?
 
Sí, te voy a invitar.
 
¿Nos puedes ayudar mañana?
 
No, no los puedo ayudar.
 
In negative sentences, the direct object pronoun is
placed between 
no
 and the conjugated verb.
 
Adolfo no 
la
 va a llamar.
 
Adolfo is not going to call her.
 
But, again, as in affirmative sentences, the object
pronoun may be attached to the end of the infinitive
or present participle.
 
Adolfo no va a llamar
la
.
19
 
El 
Pretérito
de los verbos
20
 
I went to the store.
I bought a shirt.
I paid in cash.
 
El 
Pretérito
:
 
  is a 
past
 tense (“-ed”)
  talks about 
what happened
  is a 
completed action
21
 
The 
stem
 for regular verbs in the
pretérito
 is the infinitive stem.
 
Tomar
 
tom-
Hablar
 
habl-
Comer
 
com-
Beber
 
beb-
Abrir
 
abr-
Salir
  
sal-
22
 
Pretérito
 endings for 
-ar
 verbs are:
 
               -aste
 
-amos
-asteis
-aron
23
 
Pretérito
 endings for 
–er / -ir
 verbs
are:
 
               -iste
               -ió
 
-imos
-isteis
-ieron
24
 
REMEMBER
:
 
  accents on the “yo” form
 
and the “él / ella / Ud.”
 
form
-ar / -ir “nosotros” form is
 
the same in present and
 
pretérito
25
 
(-
ar 
verbs)
 
tomé
tomaste
tomó
 
tomamos
tomasteis
tomaron
 
Por ejemplo:
26
 
(-
ar 
verbs)
 
hablé
hablaste
habló
 
hablamos
hablasteis
hablaron
 
Por ejemplo:
27
 
(-er / -ir
 
verbs)
 
comí
comiste
comió
 
comimos
comisteis
comieron
 
Por ejemplo:
28
 
(-
ar 
verbs)
 
trabajé
trabajaste
trabajó
 
trabajamos
trabajasteis
trabajaron
 
Por ejemplo:
29
 
(-er / -ir
 
verbs)
 
volví
volviste
volvió
 
volvimos
volvisteis
volvieron
 
Por ejemplo:
30
 
(-er / -ir
 
verbs)
 
abrí
abriste
abrió
 
abrimos
abristeis
abrieron
 
Por ejemplo:
31
 
(-er / -ir
 
verbs)
 
escribí
escribiste
escribió
 
escribimos
escribisteis
escribieron
 
Por ejemplo:
32
 
Verbs ending in 
-
car
, 
-
gar
, and
-
zar
 
 have a spelling change in the “yo”
form of the 
pretérito
.
 
buscar      tocar        practicar
pagar        jugar        llegar
almorzar   empezar   comenzar
 
Unos Irregulares:
33
 
The “yo” form of the 
pretérito
changes to conserve the 
sound
of the infinitive:
 
-car
-gar
-zar
 
“-qué”
“-gué”
“-cé”
 
“tocé”
“jugé”
“rezé”
34
 
(-car
 
verbs)
 
bus
qué
buscaste
buscó
 
buscamos
buscasteis
buscaron
 
Por ejemplo:
35
 
(-car
 
verbs)
 
practi
qué
practicaste
practicó
 
practicamos
practicasteis
practicaron
 
Por ejemplo:
36
 
(-gar
 
verbs)
 
pa
gué
pagaste
pagó
 
pagamos
pagasteis
pagaron
 
Por ejemplo:
37
 
(-gar
 
verbs)
 
ju
gué
jugaste
jugó
 
jugamos
jugasteis
jugaron
 
Por ejemplo:
38
 
(-zar
 
verbs)
 
almor
almorzaste
almorzó
 
almorzamos
almorzasteis
almorzaron
 
Por ejemplo:
39
 
(-zar
 
verbs)
 
empe
empezaste
empezó
 
empezamos
empezasteis
empezaron
 
Por ejemplo:
 
There are several Spanish adjectives
that have a shortened form when
they precede certain nouns.
 
The most common shortened adjectives are those that drop
the final -o in front of a masculine singular noun.
 
normal
 
 
shortened
 
  
meaning
alguno 
 
algún
 
  
some
bueno 
 
buen
 
  
good
malo 
 
mal
 
   
bad
ninguno 
 
ningún
 
  
no, none
postrero 
 
postrer
 
  
last, final
primero 
 
primer
 
  
first
tercero 
 
tercer
 
  
third uno 
un
 one, a
Note that 
algún
 and 
ningún
 require the addition of an 
accent
in order to maintain the proper word stress.
 
The adjective 
Santo
 is shortened to 
San
 when it
precedes most masculine saints' names.
 
San Diego
San José
San Juan
San Luís
San Miguel
San Tobías
exceptions: Santo Domingo, Santo Tomás, Santo
Toribio
 
There are two adjectives which are shortened
before a noun of either gender:
 
grande 
  
gran
 
  
big
cualquiera 
 
cualquier
 
 
any
 
Ciento
 is shortened to 
cien
 when it
precedes a plural noun of either gender or
when it multiplies a number.
 
ciento veinte 120
cien euros
 100 euros
cien mil
 100,000
 
Los Números en Español
 
Spanish
4
Teachers.org
Del 0 al 100
 
0-19
20
  
=
 
veinte
30
  
=
 
treinta
40
  
=
 
cuarenta
50
  
=
 
cincuenta
60
  
=
 
sesenta
70
  
=
 
setenta
80
  
=
 
ochenta
90
  
=
 
noventa
100
 
=
 
cien
Spanish
4
Teachers.org
Del 20 al 99
 
Notice: the numbers that
only form one word are…
Spanish
4
Teachers.org
Recuerda!!!
 
Los números del 0 al 99 are
very important because
they make part of all the
other numbers that
follow…
Spanish
4
Teachers.org
100, 200, 300, 400, …, 900
 
To learn the numbers from 100- 999, we
must first learn the ones ending in two
CEROS.
 Like which ones???
Spanish
4
Teachers.org
 
200  =  doscientos
300  =  trescientos
400  =  cuatrocientos
500  =  quinientos
600  =  seiscientos
700  =  
sete
cientos
800  =  ochocientos
900  =  
nove
cientos
200, 300, 400, …, 900
Trick:
Number + cientos
Be careful with
these because they
are exceptions!!!
Spanish
4
Teachers.org
101 al 199
 
The numbers from 101 to 199 start with 
Ciento
 
 
1 0 1
 
ciento
 
uno
 
1 1 2
 
ciento
 
doce
 
1 9 9
 
ciento
 
noventa y
nueve
 
Trick: Ciento + Number
Spanish
4
Teachers.org
200 al 1000
 
Numbers from 201 to 1000 are very easy:
 
200
 
300
 
400
 
900
 
doscientos
 
trescientos
 
cuatrocientos
 
novecientos
 
quinientos
 
500
 
201
 
304
 
415
 
999
 
doscientos uno
 
trescientos cuatro
 
cuatrocientos quince
 
Novecientos noventa   y
nueve
 
quinientos veinte
 
520
 
1000 MIL
Spanish
4
Teachers.org
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Direct objects receive the direct action of the verb, and when they are people or domesticated animals, the personal "a" is used. Direct object pronouns replace the object to avoid repetition. Learn more about the personal "a", its usage, and how to identify direct objects in sentences.

  • Direct Objects
  • Pronouns
  • Personal A
  • Language Learning

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  1. Direct Objects, the Personal a, and Direct Object Pronouns (Los complementos directos, la a personal, y los pronombres de complemento directo)

  2. A direct object is a thing or person that receives the direct action of the verb. I eat the tamales. Yo como los tamales. scar kisses his wife. scar besa a su esposa.

  3. Notice that direct objects that are people or domesticated animals (and sometimes personified things) are signaled by the personal a. scar kisses his wife. scar besa a su esposa. I walk my dog every morning. Paseo a mi perro todas las ma anas. Patriots love their country. Los patriotas aman a su patria. More information about the personal a follows on the next slide.

  4. More on the personal a Generally, the personal a is not used after the verb tener. scar tiene una esposa muy bonita. scar has a very pretty wife. Nor is it used with a direct object that is an unspecified or indefinite person. Buscamos una secretaria eficiente. We re looking for an efficient secretary.

  5. More on the personal a The personal a followed by the definite article el contracts to form al. Alicia visita al m dico. Alicia visits the doctor. When the interrogative qui n(es) requests information about the direct object, the personal a precedes it. A qui n llama Elisa? Whom is Elisa calling? The personal a must be repeated before each human direct object in a series. Visito a Emilio y a Lola. I visit Emilio and Lola.

  6. Identifying a direct object A direct object is a thing or person that answers what or whom, respectively, in the following equation: SUBJECT + VERB + WHAT (WHOM) DIRECT OBJECT Yo como los tamales

  7. Pronouns are particles (little words) that take the place of the object itself, so that the object does not have to be repeated ad nauseum . . . Did you buythe piano? Yes, I boughtthe piano. Did you pay a lot forthe piano? Well, the pianowasn t cheap. Can you playthe piano? Yes, and my brother playsthe pianotoo.

  8. Pronouns are particles (little words) that take the place of the object itself, so that the object does not have to be repeated ad nauseum . . . the piano the piano the piano the piano the piano the piano Notice how many times the piano was repeated.

  9. Pronouns are particles (little words) that take the place of the object itself, so that the object does not have to be repeated ad nauseum . . . A better, more concise way is to use pronouns instead of repeating the noun over and over. Did you buythe piano? Yes, I boughtit. Did you pay a lot for Well, wasn t cheap. Can you play Yes, and my brother plays ? it it ? it too. it

  10. Direct object pronouns in Spanish, just as in English, take the place of the direct object itself, so that the direct object does not have to be repeated, and repeated, and repeated . . . Comprasteel piano? S ,locompr . Puedes tocar S , y mi hermano lo ? lo sabe tocar tambi n.

  11. The direct object pronouns in Spanish are as follows: These are used exclusively me te nos os for people These are used lo, la (lo, la) (los, las) los, las for people and things

  12. Now lets see how pronouns replace things or people that are direct objects. I eat the tamales. Yo como los tamales. Yo los como. Notice that third-person direct object pronouns agree in gender and number with the noun they replace.

  13. Now lets see how pronouns replace things or people that are direct objects. scar kisses his wife. scar besa a su esposa. scar la besa. Notice that third-person direct object pronouns agree in gender and number with the noun they replace.

  14. Notice that the personal a goes away when the direct object noun is replaced by a direct object pronoun. scar besa a su esposa. a scar la besa.

  15. PLACEMENT OF PRONOUNS ALL object pronouns are placed either before a conjugated verb (except for affirmative command forms) scar la besa. ( scar, b sala.) or after an infinitive or gerund (present participle). scar la va a besar. scar va a besarla. scar la est besando. scar est bes ndola.

  16. Direct object pronouns are commonly used in conversation when the object is established or known. Again, this avoids needless repetition. D nde ves a Jorge y a Sarita? Where do you see Jorge and Sarita? I see them in class. Los veo en clase. Visitas a tu abuela con frecuencia? Do you visit your grandmother often? S , la visito mucho. Yes, I visit her a lot. Do not be misled into thinking that los and la in the above answers are the subjects of the sentences just because they appear in subject position. The subject of both answers, which is of course yo, is simply not expressed in these instances.

  17. Be aware that object pronouns, just like verbs, must make a flip-flop transition when first and second persons are involved in the conversation. Me vas a invitar a tu fiesta? S , te voy a invitar. Nos puedes ayudar ma ana? No, no los puedo ayudar.

  18. In negative sentences, the direct object pronoun is placed between no and the conjugated verb. Adolfo no la va a llamar. Adolfo is not going to call her. But, again, as in affirmative sentences, the object pronoun may be attached to the end of the infinitive or present participle. Adolfo no va a llamarla.

  19. El Pretrito de los verbos 19

  20. El Pretrito: is a past tense ( -ed ) talks about what happened is a completed action I went to the store. I bought a shirt. I paid in cash. 20

  21. The stem for regular verbs in the pret rito is the infinitive stem. Tomar tom- Hablar habl- Comer com- Beber Abrir Salir beb- abr- sal- 21

  22. Pretrito endings for -ar verbs are: - -aste - -amos -asteis -aron 22

  23. Pretrito endings for er / -ir verbs are: - -iste -i -imos -isteis -ieron 23

  24. REMEMBER: accents on the yo form and the l / ella / Ud. form -ar / -ir nosotros form is the same in present and pret rito 24

  25. Por ejemplo: (-ar verbs) tom tomaste tom tomamos tomasteis tomaron tomar 25

  26. Por ejemplo: (-ar verbs) habl hablaste habl hablamos hablasteis hablaron hablar 26

  27. Por ejemplo: (-er / -ir verbs) com comiste comi comimos comisteis comieron comer 27

  28. Por ejemplo: (-ar verbs) trabaj trabajaste trabaj trabajamos trabajasteis trabajaron trabajar 28

  29. Por ejemplo: (-er / -ir verbs) volv volviste volvi volvimos volvisteis volvieron volver 29

  30. Por ejemplo: (-er / -ir verbs) abr abriste abri abrimos abristeis abrieron abrir 30

  31. Por ejemplo: (-er / -ir verbs) escrib escribiste escribi escribimos escribisteis escribieron escribir 31

  32. Unos Irregulares: Verbs ending in -car, -gar, and -zar have a spelling change in the yo form of the pret rito. buscar tocar practicar pagar jugar llegar almorzar empezar comenzar 32

  33. The yo form of the pretrito changes to conserve the sound of the infinitive: -car -gar -zar -qu -gu -c toc jug rez 33

  34. Por ejemplo: (-car verbs) busqu buscaste busc buscamos buscasteis buscaron buscar 34

  35. Por ejemplo: (-car verbs) practiqu practicaste practic practicamos practicasteis practicaron practicar 35

  36. Por ejemplo: (-gar verbs) pagu pagaste pag pagamos pagasteis pagaron pagar 36

  37. Por ejemplo: (-gar verbs) jugu jugaste jug jugamos jugasteis jugaron jugar 37

  38. Por ejemplo: (-zar verbs) almorc almorzaste almorz almorzamos almorzasteis almorzaron almorzar 38

  39. Por ejemplo: (-zar verbs) empec empezaste empez empezamos empezasteis empezaron empezar 39

  40. There are several Spanish adjectives that have a shortened form when they precede certain nouns.

  41. The most common shortened adjectives are those that drop the final -o in front of a masculine singular noun. normal alguno bueno buen malo mal ninguno postrero primero tercero Note that alg n and ning n require the addition of an accent in order to maintain the proper word stress. shortened alg n some meaning good ning n postrer primer tercer bad third uno un one, a no, none last, final first

  42. The adjective Santo is shortened to San when it precedes most masculine saints' names. San Diego San Jos San Juan San Lu s San Miguel San Tob as exceptions: Santo Domingo, Santo Tom s, Santo Toribio

  43. There are two adjectives which are shortened before a noun of either gender: grande cualquiera cualquier any gran big

  44. Ciento is shortened to cien when it precedes a plural noun of either gender or when it multiplies a number. ciento veinte 120 cien euros 100 euros cien mil 100,000

  45. Los Nmeros en Espaol Spanish4Teachers.org Spanish Spanish4 4Teachers.org Teachers.org

  46. Del 0 al 100 0-19 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 = = = = = = = = = veinte treinta cuarenta cincuenta sesenta setenta ochenta noventa cien Spanish4Teachers.org Spanish Spanish4 4Teachers.org Teachers.org

  47. Del 20 al 99 Trick Ejemplo 21-29 veinti + n mero veintidos 31-39 treinta y + n mero treinta y tres 41-49 cuarenta y + n mero cuarenta y seis 91-99 noventa y + n mero noventa y nueve Notice: the numbers that only form one word are Spanish4Teachers.org Spanish Spanish4 4Teachers.org Teachers.org

  48. Recuerda!!! Los n meros del 0 al 99 are very important because they make part of all the other numbers that follow Spanish4Teachers.org Spanish Spanish4 4Teachers.org Teachers.org

  49. 100, 200, 300, 400, , 900 To learn the numbers from 100- 999, we must first learn the ones ending in two CEROS. Like which ones??? Spanish4Teachers.org Spanish Spanish4 4Teachers.org Teachers.org

  50. 200, 300, 400, , 900 200 = doscientos 300 = trescientos 400 = cuatrocientos 500 = quinientos 600 = seiscientos 700 = setecientos 800 = ochocientos 900 = novecientos Trick: Number + cientos Be careful with these because they are exceptions!!! Spanish4Teachers.org Spanish Spanish4 4Teachers.org Teachers.org

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