Breakdown of Depois do jantar, ela passa a esfregona com água quente.
ela
she
a água
the water
o jantar
the dinner
depois de
after
com
with
quente
hot
passar a esfregona
to mop
Questions & Answers about Depois do jantar, ela passa a esfregona com água quente.
What does bold passsa a esfregona bold actually mean?
It’s the standard European Portuguese way to say bold to mop the floor bold. Literally it’s bold pass (run) the mop bold. Portuguese often uses bold passar bold + a tool to express an action:
- bold passar a esfregona bold = to mop (the floor)
- bold passar o aspirador bold = to vacuum
- bold passar a ferro bold = to iron (clothes)
- bold passar um pano bold = to wipe down (with a cloth)
Why is it bold Depois do jantar bold and not bold Depois de o jantar bold or bold da jantar bold?
Can I say bold Depois de jantar, … bold instead?
Is bold Depois jantar bold (without bold de bold) ever correct?
No. With a noun or infinitive you need bold depois de bold. For a clause, European Portuguese uses bold depois de (que) bold, while Brazilian Portuguese often uses bold depois que bold.
Why is it bold a esfregona bold (with the definite article) and not just bold esfregona bold?
What does bold com água quente bold express? Could I say bold com a água quente bold or bold em água quente bold?
Do I need to say bold o chão bold (the floor), or is it implied?
Is bold esfregona bold only European Portuguese? What’s used in Brazil?
What does the present tense bold passa bold convey here? Could it be future?
It’s the simple present, which often expresses a habitual action: After dinner, she usually mops. With a time reference, Portuguese can also use the present for a scheduled near-future: bold Depois do jantar, ela passa a esfregona bold can mean she’ll do it later today. For right-now action, use the European Portuguese progressive: bold está a passar a esfregona bold.
Can I drop the subject pronoun bold ela bold?
Yes. European Portuguese is a pro‑drop language, so bold Depois do jantar, passa a esfregona… bold is fine if the subject is clear from context. Keep bold ela bold if you need clarity or emphasis.
Is the comma after the opening time phrase necessary?
Can I put the time phrase at the end instead?
How do you pronounce the tricky words (European Portuguese)?
Approximate guides:
- bold depois bold: dih-POYSH
- bold jantar bold: zhuhn-TAR
- bold passa bold: PAH-suh (final a is a reduced sound)
- bold esfregona bold: sh-freh-GOH-nuh
- bold água bold: AH-gwa
Why is it bold água quente bold (adjective after the noun) and not bold quente água bold?
Adjectives usually follow nouns in Portuguese. So bold água quente bold is normal. Putting the adjective before the noun is marked or stylistic and doesn’t apply here.
Are there near-synonyms to the whole sentence?
What other useful bold passar + tool bold expressions should I know?
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