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Questions & Answers about Laura está en la biblioteca.
Why is it está and not es?
Spanish uses estar to express location of people and things: Laura está en la biblioteca. Use ser for identity, description, origin, time, and the location of events (e.g., La reunión es en la biblioteca).
What form is está, exactly?
It’s the third-person singular present of estar: “he/she/it is” or formal “you are.” Quick present forms (Spain):
- yo estoy
- tú estás
- él/ella/usted está
- nosotros/as estamos
- vosotros/as estáis (Spain)
- ellos/ellas/ustedes están
Why does está have an accent?
The accent marks the stress on the last syllable: es-TÁ. Without it, it would be pronounced with stress on ES. It also distinguishes está (verb) from esta (this, feminine). Accents are required even on capital letters.
Does en mean “in” or “at”?
Both. En covers “in” and “at” depending on context: está en la biblioteca = “is in/at the library.” If you need “inside,” say dentro de la biblioteca.
Why not a la biblioteca here?
A generally indicates movement toward a place: Va a la biblioteca (“She goes to the library”). For being located somewhere, use en: está en la biblioteca.
Do I have to include the article la?
Yes, normally. Spanish typically uses articles with singular countable nouns: en la biblioteca. Without the article sounds odd in most contexts. If it’s non-specific, say en una biblioteca (“in a library”).
Is biblioteca feminine?
Yes. It takes la in singular and las in plural: la biblioteca / las bibliotecas. The word ends in -a and is feminine (with some unrelated exceptions in Spanish, but not here).
Is biblioteca the same as “bookstore”?
No—false friend alert. Biblioteca = library. Librería = bookstore. A librarian is bibliotecario/a.
How do you pronounce the sentence?
Approximation: LAU-ra es-TÁ en la bi-blio-TÉ-ka. Notes:
- au like “ow” in “cow”
- b and v sound the same in Spanish
- c before a sounds like “k” (bi-blio-TÉ-ka)
- Tap the single r in Laura lightly
- Stress on -tá (está) and -té (biblioteca)
Can I change the word order?
Yes, for emphasis or style: En la biblioteca está Laura (emphasizes the place) or Está Laura en la biblioteca (often in questions/echo statements). The neutral order is Laura está en la biblioteca.
How do I make it negative?
Place no before the verb: Laura no está en la biblioteca.
How do I ask “Where is Laura?” in Spanish?
¿Dónde está Laura? Use the inverted question mark at the beginning; no auxiliary “do/does” is needed.
When would I use ser with a place?
Use ser for events: La fiesta es en la biblioteca (“The party is at/in the library”). For people or objects being located, use estar: Laura está en la biblioteca.
Are there any contractions I should know here?
Not with en la—there’s no contraction. But remember: a + el = al (Voy al museo) and de + el = del (Vengo del museo). With feminine articles (la), there’s no contraction.
Could está mean “you are” in Spain?
It can, with formal usted: Usted está. Without a named subject, está could mean “he/she/you (formal) is.” With Laura, it’s clearly third-person singular.
Do I need to say Ella?
No. Spanish often drops subject pronouns because the verb form shows the subject. Ella está en la biblioteca is correct but usually unnecessary when the subject (Laura) is named.