Breakdown of Mi hermana prefirió una ración de croquetas y dijo que el aperitivo estaba muy bueno.
Questions & Answers about Mi hermana prefirió una ración de croquetas y dijo que el aperitivo estaba muy bueno.
Why is it prefirió and not preferió?
Why is prefirió used instead of prefería?
Prefirió is the preterite, which presents the action as completed: she made a choice at that moment.
- prefirió = she preferred / she chose
- prefería = she used to prefer / she was preferring / she generally preferred
In this sentence, it sounds like a specific event, probably during one meal or one occasion, so prefirió fits better.
What does una ración de croquetas mean exactly?
In Spain, una ración usually means a serving or a portion, especially in a bar or restaurant.
So:
- una ración de croquetas = a portion of croquettes
In Spain, food is often ordered as:
- una tapa
- media ración
- una ración
A ración is usually bigger than a tapa.
What are croquetas in Spain?
Croquetas are a very common Spanish food: small breaded and fried rolls, usually filled with a creamy mixture such as ham, chicken, cod, or mushrooms.
So although croquetas resembles English croquettes, Spanish croquetas are a very specific and very popular tapas dish.
Why does it say dijo que and not dijo de que?
Why is it estaba muy bueno and not era muy bueno?
Why is it bueno and not buena?
What does aperitivo mean here?
Why is estaba in the imperfect instead of estuvo?
Here, estaba describes a state or quality in the past: the appetizer was very good.
The imperfect is very common for background description, opinions, and ongoing states in the past.
- estaba muy bueno = it was very good
- estuvo muy bueno can also exist, but it sounds more like viewing the whole experience as a completed event
In reported speech after dijo que, estaba is especially natural when reporting what something was like.
Is muy bueno a natural way to talk about food in Spain?
Why is there no article before mi hermana?
Spanish usually does not use an article before a possessive adjective like mi, tu, su, etc.
So you say:
- mi hermana
- tu coche
- su casa
not:
- la mi hermana
That structure is not standard modern Spanish.
Why is there no personal a anywhere in the sentence?
The personal a is used before a specific human direct object.
Examples:
- Veo a mi hermana
- Conozco a Juan
But in your sentence:
- mi hermana is the subject, not the object
- una ración de croquetas is a thing, not a person
- el aperitivo is also a thing
So no personal a is needed.
How would a Spaniard naturally pronounce prefirió?
Roughly: preh-feh-ree-OH
The written accent on ó shows that the stress falls on the last syllable:
- pre-fi-RIÓ
That accent is important because without it, the stress pattern would be different and the form would be incorrect.
Can prefirió mean both preferred and chose?
Yes. In context, preferir often means not just having a preference in general, but actually choosing one option over another.
So:
can suggest:
- My sister preferred a portion of croquettes
- My sister opted for a portion of croquettes
- My sister chose a portion of croquettes
All are reasonable depending on context.
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