Breakdown of Guardo el cargador en el cajón.
yo
I
en
in
guardar
to keep
el cajón
the drawer
el cargador
the charger
Questions & Answers about Guardo el cargador en el cajón.
What exactly does guardo mean here, and how is it conjugated?
Guardo is the first-person singular present of guardar. It most commonly means “I put away,” “I keep,” or “I store.” So the sentence can mean either “I keep the charger in the drawer” (habitually) or “I’m putting the charger away in the drawer” (right now), depending on context. Other forms:
- Infinitive: guardar (to put away/keep/store/save)
- He/she/you formal (present): guarda
- Past (preterite, I): guardé
- Past (imperfect, I): guardaba
- Future (I): guardaré
Why use guardar instead of poner or meter?
Does the Spanish present tense here mean “right now” or “usually”?
How do I say it in the past or with the progressive?
- Preterite (completed past): Guardé el cargador en el cajón.
- Imperfect (used to/was keeping): Guardaba el cargador en el cajón.
- Present perfect (I have put it away): He guardado el cargador en el cajón.
- Progressive (I’m putting it away): Estoy guardando el cargador en el cajón.
Why is it el cargador and not mi cargador?
Can I say un cargador instead of el cargador?
How do I replace el cargador with a pronoun?
Use the direct object pronoun lo (masculine singular): Lo guardo en el cajón. In Latin America, use lo (not le) for things.
Can I also replace en el cajón with a pronoun or adverb?
Why en and not a, dentro de, or sobre?
- En covers “in/on/at” and is used for both location and final place with verbs like guardar, poner, meter: …en el cajón.
- Dentro de emphasizes “inside”: …dentro del cajón.
- A marks direction to places with motion verbs (ir a), but with guardar you say en, not a.
- Sobre/encima de mean “on (top of)”: …sobre/encima del cajón (on the drawer).
Can I change the word order?
What are regional words for “drawer”?
Pronunciation tips for guardo el cargador en el cajón?
Why does cajón have an accent?
What’s the difference between guardo and guardó?
Could cargador mean something other than a phone charger?
Are there contractions I should know here?
How do commands with pronouns work here?
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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