Questions & Answers about Mi pie está mojado.
Why is the sentence Mi pie está mojado using está instead of es?
Why is it mojado and not mojada?
Adjectives in Spanish agree in gender with the noun they modify. Pie is a masculine noun, so the adjective mojado takes the masculine ending -o. If you were talking about la mano, you’d say La mano está mojada because mano is feminine.
Can I say Mis pies están mojados instead?
Why is mi not mío in Mi pie?
Mi is the simple possessive adjective (“my”) used before a noun. Mío is a possessive pronoun (“mine”) that stands alone or follows a preposition. You’d use mío if you said something like El pie mojado es mío (“The wet foot is mine”).
The word pie looks like “pie” in English. How do I know it means “foot” here?
Context is key. In Spanish, pie always means “foot.” The dessert “pie” in English is pastel or tarta in Spanish. Watch out for false friends—words that look similar but mean different things.
Where does the accent in está come from, and why is it important?
Could I drop the pronoun and just say Está mojado?
How do you pronounce pie and mojado in Latin American Spanish?
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“How does verb conjugation work in Spanish?”
Spanish verbs change form based on the subject, tense, and mood. Regular verbs follow predictable patterns depending on whether they end in ‑ar, ‑er, or ‑ir. For example, "hablar" (to speak) becomes "hablo" (I speak), "hablas" (you speak), and "habla" (he/she speaks) in the present tense.
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