Breakdown of Guardé el borrador y el lápiz en el estuche para no perderlos.
yo
I
en
in
y
and
para
to
los
them
no
not
perder
to lose
guardar
to put away
el lápiz
the pencil
el borrador
the eraser
el estuche
the case
Questions & Answers about Guardé el borrador y el lápiz en el estuche para no perderlos.
Why does guardé have an accent, and what tense/person is it?
Guardé is first person singular preterite of guardar (“I put away/I stored”). The accent marks the stress on the last syllable and distinguishes it from forms like guarde (present subjunctive or usted command) and guarda (he/she/you informal present).
Why is the subject “I” omitted?
What does borrador mean here?
Why repeat the article: el borrador y el lápiz instead of just el borrador y lápiz?
What’s the nuance of guardar versus poner or meter?
- Guardar = to put away/store (with a sense of safekeeping). Best here.
- Poner = to put/place (neutral, no “store” nuance).
- Meter = to put/place inside something (very common in Latin America: Metí el borrador y el lápiz en el estuche).
All are understandable; guardar highlights the purpose of not losing them.
Why en el estuche and not al estuche or del estuche?
What exactly is an estuche?
Why perderlos and not perderles?
Because perder takes a direct object, so you use the direct object pronoun los (them). Les is indirect object. Using les here would be incorrect in standard Spanish.
Why is the pronoun plural los?
Can I say para no los perder?
Could I use para que instead of para?
What’s the difference between no perderlos and no se pierdan/perdieran?
Why not use guardaba?
How is lápiz pluralized, and why the accent?
Does word order matter? What if I say: Guardé el borrador y el lápiz para no perderlos en el estuche?
Can I replace the nouns with a pronoun: Los guardé en el estuche?
Is there any change of y to e here?
Can I front the purpose clause: Para no perderlos, guardé el borrador y el lápiz en el estuche?
Are there regional vocabulary alternatives I should know?
Why not use the personal “a” before the objects (e.g., Guardé a el borrador...)?
The personal a is used with animate, usually human, direct objects. These are inanimate objects, so no a. Also remember contractions only happen with a + el = al and de + el = del, not with en + el.
AI Language TutorTry it ↗
“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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