Breakdown of Para mí, llegar tarde no es un fracaso si avisas con tiempo.
ser
to be
tú
you
llegar
to arrive
si
if
tarde
late
para
for
mí
me
un
a
no
not
el fracaso
the failure
avisar
to let know
con tiempo
in time
Questions & Answers about Para mí, llegar tarde no es un fracaso si avisas con tiempo.
What does Para mí mean here—“for me” or “in my opinion”?
Can I say A mí instead of Para mí in this sentence?
Why does mí have an accent?
Mí with an accent is the stressed prepositional pronoun (“me” after a preposition): para mí, de mí, sin mí. Mi without an accent is the possessive adjective (“my”): mi casa.
Is the comma after Para mí necessary?
Why is llegar tarde an infinitive? Could I use a gerund like llegando tarde?
Why is it llegar tarde and not estar tarde to mean “to be late”?
Why es and not está in no es un fracaso?
Why un fracaso? Could I say no es fracaso without the article?
Does fracaso have to agree with llegar tarde in gender/number?
Why is the si-clause in the present indicative (si avisas) and not subjunctive or future?
Real/likely conditions use si + present indicative, and the main clause can be present/future/imperative: Si avisas con tiempo, (no es / no será / no es) un fracaso. Subjunctive appears in hypothetical patterns: Si avisaras, no sería un fracaso. The future (si avisarás) is not used in si-clauses.
Can I use usted or vos instead of tú in si avisas?
What exactly does con tiempo mean? How is it different from a tiempo?
Are there synonyms for con tiempo that work in Latin America?
Do I need to say whom I’m notifying after avisas?
Is it avisar a alguien de algo or avisar que...?
Both are used:
- Avisar a alguien de algo / de que... (traditional, careful)
- Avisar que... (very common in Latin America, especially with the meaning “to inform that”) Examples: Le avisé a Marta de que llegaría tarde. / Le avisé a Marta que llegaría tarde. Avoid unnecessary de when you already have que unless you use de que together.
Which pronoun should I use with avisar: le or lo/la?
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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