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A direct object tells who or what receives the action of the verb. Devolví el libro. I returned the book. (book is t

Direct object pronouns. A direct object tells who or what receives the action of the verb. Devolví el libro. I returned the book. (book is the direct object). Direct object pronouns. To avoid repeating a direct object noun, you can replace it with a direct object pronoun.

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A direct object tells who or what receives the action of the verb. Devolví el libro. I returned the book. (book is t

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  1. Direct object pronouns A direct object tells who or what receives the action of the verb. Devolví el libro.I returned the book. (book is the direct object)

  2. Direct object pronouns To avoid repeating a direct object noun, you can replace it with a direct object pronoun. In English, him, her, and it are examples of direct object pronouns. You have already used the following direct object pronouns in Spanish:

  3. Direct object pronouns

  4. Direct object pronouns Direct object pronouns have the same gender (masculine or feminine) and number (singular or plural) as the nouns they replace. They come right before the conjugated verb. ¿Devolviste los librosa la biblioteca? No, no los devolví. ¿Ayudaste a tu mamáen casa? Sí, laayudé.

  5. Direct object pronouns When an infinitive follows a verb, the direct object pronoun can be placed before the conjugated verb or attached to the infinitive. ¿Sacaste el librosobre Simón Bolívar? No, no lo pude sacar. o: No, no pude sacarlo.

  6. Irregular preterite verbs: ir, ser In the preterite, the forms of ser are the same as the forms of ir. The context makes the meaning clear. El cantante Jon Secada fuea vivir a Miami, Florida, en 1970. The singer Jon Secada went to live in Miami, Florida, in 1970. Después fueestudiante en la Universidad de Miami. Later he was a student at the University of Miami.

  7. Irregular preterite verbs: ir, ser Notice that these irregular preterite forms do not have any accents.

  8. Irregular preterite verbs: ir, ser

  9. Irregular preterite verbs: ir, ser

  10. Irregular preterite verbs: hacer, tener, estar, poder The preterite forms of tener, estar, and poder follow a pattern similar to that of the verb hacer. Like hacer, these verbs do not have any accent marks in the preterite.

  11. Irregular preterite verbs: hacer, tener, estar, poder

  12. Irregular preterite verbs: hacer, tener, estar, poder

  13. The written accent You already know the standard rules for stress and accent in Spanish. • When words end in a vowel, n, or s, the stress is on the next-to-last syllable. • When words end in a consonant (except n or s), the stress is on the last syllable. • Words that do not follow these patterns must have a written accent (called acento ortográfico or tilde). The accent indicates that you should place the stress on this syllable as you pronounce the word.

  14. The written accent Listen to and say these examples: champú olvidó cómodo médico película patín jabón adiós demás césped fútbol lápiz

  15. The written accent ¡Compruébalo! Here are some new words that all require accent marks. Copy the words and, as you hear them pronounced, write the accent mark over the correct vowel. antropologo cajon carcel ejercito fosforo lucho nilon util tipico lider

  16. The written accent Listen to and say the following refrán:

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