Breakdown of Ayer le di el libro a Laura y ella se lo prestó a su pareja.
yo
I
el libro
the book
a
to
y
and
ella
she
su
her
le
to her
dar
to give
ayer
yesterday
lo
it
prestar
to lend
la pareja
the partner
se
to her
Laura
Laura
Questions & Answers about Ayer le di el libro a Laura y ella se lo prestó a su pareja.
Who do the pronouns le, se, and lo refer to here?
- le = to Laura (indirect object) in the first clause.
- lo = the book (el libro) (direct object) in the second clause.
- se = to her partner (a su pareja) in the second clause; it’s the indirect object pronoun that replaces le before lo/la/los/las.
Why is it le di el libro a Laura and not la di el libro a Laura?
Because Laura is the recipient (indirect object), so you need the indirect object pronoun le. La would be a direct object pronoun (her/it), which would mean you gave Laura herself to someone, not the book to Laura.
Isn’t le plus a Laura redundant?
In Spanish (especially in Spain), doubling the indirect object with a clitic is normal and very common: le di … a Laura. It’s often expected and sounds most natural. You can omit le in careful or literary style (di el libro a Laura), but everyday speech strongly favors the doubled form.
Why se lo instead of le lo?
Spanish changes le/les to se when it appears immediately before a direct object clitic (lo, la, los, las) to avoid the sequence le lo. So: se lo prestó = “(she) lent it to him/her/them.”
Could se here mean “herself”?
Is the subject pronoun ella necessary?
No. Spanish usually omits subject pronouns. … y se lo prestó a su pareja is fine. Including ella adds clarity/emphasis or contrast (and helps the reader quickly switch from “I gave” to “she lent”).
Does ayer apply to both actions?
Why use the preterite (di, prestó) instead of the imperfect?
Why does prestó have an accent but di does not?
Can I change the order of the objects, like Ayer le di a Laura el libro?
Can the clitics go after the verb, like prestárselo?
They go before a finite verb (se lo prestó), but can attach to an infinitive, gerund, or affirmative command:
- Infinitive: va a prestárselo
- Gerund: está prestándoselo
- Command: ¡Préstaselo!
Why lo and not la for the book?
Does pareja mean a female partner?
Could su pareja be the subject of prestó?
No. A su pareja is marked with a, which here signals the indirect object (the recipient). The subject is ella (Laura). Also, the clitic se matches that indirect object.
Can I say y ella lo prestó a su pareja without se?
Is dejar also used for “to lend” in Spain?
Why a and not para for the recipient?
How would this change with plurals?
How do I make it crystal-clear that it’s “her partner” (Laura’s partner)?
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