Breakdown of Camino seis kilómetros cada día.
yo
I
caminar
to walk
el día
the day
cada
each, every
el kilómetro
the kilometer
seis
six
Questions & Answers about Camino seis kilómetros cada día.
Why is there no subject pronoun in Camino?
Spanish often drops subject pronouns because the verb ending shows the subject. camino ends in -o, so it already means “I walk.” You’d add yo only for emphasis or contrast, e.g., Yo camino seis kilómetros cada día, not you.
What tense is camino, and what does it express here?
It’s the present indicative, 1st person singular of caminar. With cada día, it expresses a habitual action: “I walk (as a routine).”
Can I say Estoy caminando seis kilómetros cada día?
It’s grammatical but sounds odd for a long-term habit. The progressive in Spanish focuses on an action in progress or a temporary period. It works if you mean a temporary routine, e.g., Estos días estoy caminando seis kilómetros todos los días (“These days I’m walking six kilometers every day”).
Is caminar transitive here? Why no preposition like por?
Can I change the word order?
Yes. All are natural:
- Cada día camino seis kilómetros.
- Camino seis kilómetros cada día.
- Camino cada día seis kilómetros. Starting with cada día emphasizes the frequency; ending with it is neutral.
What’s the difference between cada día and todos los días?
Other ways to say “per day”?
How do I pronounce and stress the words?
Why do día and kilómetros have written accents?
- día: The accent marks stress on í and breaks the diphthong (two syllables: dí-a).
- kilómetros: It’s an esdrújula (stress on the third-to-last syllable), and all such words carry an accent: ki-ló-me-tros.
How do I abbreviate “kilómetros” correctly?
Is it spelled with k or q: kilómetro or quilómetro?
Standard Spanish uses kilómetro (with k). quilómetro is not standard.
Could camino be the noun “road/path” here?
How do I say “about six kilometers”?
Common options:
- unos seis kilómetros
- aproximadamente seis kilómetros
- alrededor de seis kilómetros
- seis kilómetros más o menos
How do I negate the sentence?
How do I turn it into a question?
If I mean the past, which past tense should I use?
What’s the difference between caminar and andar here?
Why is día singular after cada?
Do I need an article before seis kilómetros?
No. Bare measures are standard: Camino seis kilómetros… Use an article only if referring to specific, known kilometers: Camino los seis kilómetros que me separan de la oficina.
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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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