Breakdown of ¿Puedes caminar conmigo hasta la estación?
caminar
to walk
la estación
the station
poder
to be able
hasta
to
conmigo
with me
Questions & Answers about ¿Puedes caminar conmigo hasta la estación?
Does ¿Puedes…? ask about ability or is it a polite request?
Why use caminar here? Could I use acompañar, ir, venir, andar?
- caminar = “to walk,” emphasizes the mode of movement. Your sentence literally asks someone to walk with you.
- acompañar = “to accompany,” often the most idiomatic for “walk/come with me (as company).” Very common: ¿Me acompañas (hasta/a) la estación?
- ir = “to go.” ¿Puedes ir conmigo a la estación? Neutral about transport.
- venir = “to come.” From the speaker’s perspective: ¿Puedes venir conmigo a la estación?
- andar can mean “to walk” in parts of Latin America, but usage varies. Caminar is safest and most widely understood.
Why is it conmigo and not con mí?
What nuance does hasta la estación have? Could I say a la estación?
- hasta la estación emphasizes the limit/endpoint (“up to the station” = all the way to there).
- a la estación is a neutral “to the station.” Often both are fine. If you want “toward (not necessarily all the way),” use hacia la estación. Examples:
- ¿Puedes caminar conmigo hasta la estación? all the way to the station
- ¿Puedes ir conmigo a la estación? to the station (neutral)
- ¿Puedes caminar conmigo hacia la estación? toward the station
Why la estación? Is it always feminine, and why the accent?
What’s up with the inverted question mark ¿?
How do I pronounce tricky parts like hasta and estación?
Can I move conmigo to a different spot?
Could I use a pronoun with an infinitive, like acompañarme?
How do I say it formally or to more than one person?
What if the country uses vos instead of tú?
Is estación the right word for all types of “station”? What about bus “stops”?
Do any prepositions here contract, like “al” or “del”?
Is caminar conmigo the most natural way to ask someone to “walk me” to the station?
What if we’re not walking (e.g., by car)?
How would I answer naturally?
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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