A la meva amiga li fa mal la panxa perquè avui no ha dinat.

Breakdown of A la meva amiga li fa mal la panxa perquè avui no ha dinat.

l'amic
the friend
no
not
avui
today
a
to
li
her
meu
my
perquè
because
dinar
to have lunch
fer mal
to hurt
la panxa
the stomach

Questions & Answers about A la meva amiga li fa mal la panxa perquè avui no ha dinat.

Why are both A la meva amiga and li used? Don’t they both mean to my friend?

Yes, they refer to the same person.

In Catalan, this is very common with indirect objects: you often have both:

  • the full phrase: A la meva amiga
  • the clitic pronoun: li

This is called clitic doubling.

So:

  • A la meva amiga = to my friend
  • li = to her

In this sentence, li is not optional in normal Catalan. Once you introduce the indirect object like A la meva amiga, the pronoun li is expected.

A similar pattern is:

  • A en Joan li agrada el cafè. = Joan likes coffee.

Why does Catalan say la meva amiga instead of just meva amiga?

Because Catalan normally uses the definite article with possessives.

So the usual pattern is:

  • la meva amiga = my friend
  • el meu llibre = my book
  • la seva casa = his/her house

This is different from English, where you usually use just my, your, his, etc. without the.

So la meva amiga is the normal Catalan way to say my friend.


How does li fa mal la panxa work grammatically?

This is a very common Catalan structure.

  • fer mal = to hurt / to cause pain
  • li = to her
  • la panxa = the belly / tummy / stomach area

Literally, the structure is closer to:

  • The belly causes pain to her

Natural English is:

  • Her stomach hurts
  • She has a stomachache

So the thing that hurts, la panxa, is the grammatical subject.

That is why the verb agrees with la panxa.


Why does it say la panxa and not la seva panxa?

Because with body parts, Catalan usually uses the definite article, not a possessive, when it is already clear whose body part it is.

So Catalan prefers:

  • Li fa mal la panxa. = Her stomach hurts.
  • Em fa mal el cap. = My head hurts.
  • Li fan mal les cames. = Her legs hurt.

The owner is already understood from the pronoun:

  • em = to me
  • et = to you
  • li = to him/her

Using la seva panxa is possible, but it sounds more emphatic or contrastive, as if you really want to stress her stomach rather than someone else’s.


What exactly does panxa mean? Is it the same as estómac?

Not exactly.

Panxa is an everyday word meaning something like:

  • belly
  • tummy
  • stomach area

It is common in normal speech.

Estómac is more anatomical and specifically means stomach as an internal organ.

So in a sentence about feeling pain after not eating, panxa sounds very natural and everyday.


Why is the verb fa singular?

Because the subject is singular: la panxa.

In li fa mal la panxa:

  • la panxa = subject
  • fa = singular verb form

If the thing that hurts is plural, the verb becomes plural:

  • Li fan mal els peus. = Her feet hurt.
  • Em fan mal les mans. = My hands hurt.

Notice that mal stays the same:

  • fa mal
  • fan mal

It does not change for singular or plural.


Does dinar mean to dine?

No. This is a very common false friend for English speakers.

In Catalan:

  • esmorzar = to have breakfast
  • dinar = to have lunch
  • sopar = to have dinner / supper

So:

  • avui no ha dinat = today she hasn’t had lunch

Even though dinar looks a bit like English dine, it refers to lunch, not dinner.


Why is it no ha dinat instead of another past form?

Ha dinat is the present perfect:

  • ha = has
  • dinat = had lunch

So no ha dinat means hasn’t had lunch.

This form is very natural here because:

  • the time is avui = today
  • the result matters now: she has a stomachache now because she hasn’t eaten lunch today

So the sentence has a clear connection to the present.

A different past form, like no va dinar, is possible in Catalan in other contexts, but no ha dinat fits very well here because of the current relevance.


Why is perquè written as one word with an accent?

Because perquè means because.

Catalan distinguishes:

  • perquè = because
  • per què = why / for what reason

So here:

  • perquè avui no ha dinat = because today she hasn’t had lunch

The accent helps distinguish it from other similar forms.


Is the word order fixed, or can it change?

Catalan word order is flexible, but not random.

This sentence begins with A la meva amiga to introduce the person as the topic:

  • A la meva amiga li fa mal la panxa...

That is a very natural order.

You could also hear:

  • Li fa mal la panxa a la meva amiga.

But if you start with the full indirect object phrase A la meva amiga, the pronoun li should still be there.

So the given sentence is both grammatical and very natural.


Could Catalan also say this in a different way?

Yes. A very common alternative is:

  • La meva amiga té mal de panxa perquè avui no ha dinat.

This also means:

  • My friend has a stomachache because she hasn’t had lunch today.

So Catalan often expresses this idea in two common ways:

  • Li fa mal la panxa = her stomach hurts
  • Té mal de panxa = she has a stomachache

Both are natural, but the original sentence is perfectly normal Catalan.

AI Language TutorTry it ↗
What's the best way to learn Catalan grammar?
Catalan grammar becomes intuitive with practice. Focus on understanding the core patterns first — how sentences are structured, how verbs change form, and how words relate to each other. Our course breaks these concepts into small lessons so you can build understanding step by step.

Sign up free — start using our AI language tutor

Start learning Catalan

Master Catalan — from A la meva amiga li fa mal la panxa perquè avui no ha dinat to fluency

All course content and exercises are completely free — no paywalls, no trial periods.

  • Infinitely deep — unlimited vocabulary and grammar
  • Fast-paced — build complex sentences from the start
  • Unforgettable — efficient spaced repetition system
  • AI tutor to answer your grammar questions