Breakdown of Reciclamos cada lata y cada caja de cartón en casa.
nosotros
we
de
of
cada
each, every
y
and
la casa
the home
en
at
la caja
the box
reciclar
to recycle
la lata
the can
el cartón
the cardboard
Questions & Answers about Reciclamos cada lata y cada caja de cartón en casa.
Where is the subject “we” in this sentence?
Spanish often drops subject pronouns. The verb ending in -amos on Reciclamos already tells you the subject is nosotros/nosotras. You can add it for emphasis: Nosotros reciclamos… or Nosotras reciclamos…
Is reciclamos present or past?
Why repeat cada before both nouns? Can I say cada lata y caja de cartón?
Can cada be plural or take an article, like cadas or cada las latas?
What’s the difference between cada and todas las?
Why is it caja de cartón (singular) and not caja de cartones?
Could I just say caja instead of caja de cartón?
Yes, if the context already implies cardboard. Caja is any box; caja de cartón specifies a cardboard box, which is typical in recycling contexts.
What’s the nuance of en casa versus en la casa?
- en casa = at home (general/idiomatic).
- en la casa = in the house (a specific house or the interior). Both are correct; the meaning shifts slightly.
What’s the difference between en casa and a casa?
- en casa = at home (location).
- a casa = to home (movement). Example: Vamos a casa, but Reciclamos en casa.
Do I need the personal a before cada lata or cada caja?
No. The personal a is used for specific people (and often pets). Inanimate direct objects like latas and cajas don’t take it.
Can I change the word order?
How do I replace the objects with a pronoun?
Any pronunciation tips for this sentence?
Is a comma needed before y?
Are there regional vocabulary differences for lata and caja de cartón?
- lata (can) is widely understood. In some places (e.g., Mexico) you may also hear bote for certain cans/containers, but lata is safest.
- caja de cartón is standard for cardboard box; caja alone is fine when the material is obvious.
Does the verb change with nosotras?
Could I express this with an impersonal se?
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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