Breakdown of A mi hermana le da miedo aterrizar, pero esta vez el avión tocó la pista muy suavemente.
Questions & Answers about A mi hermana le da miedo aterrizar, pero esta vez el avión tocó la pista muy suavemente.
Why does Spanish say A mi hermana le da miedo instead of something more literal like mi hermana has fear?
Because Spanish often expresses this idea with the pattern dar miedo = to frighten / to give fear.
So:
- A mi hermana le da miedo aterrizar literally looks like Landing gives fear to my sister
- Natural English: My sister is afraid of landing / Landing scares my sister
This is a very common Spanish structure:
- Me da miedo volar = Flying scares me / I’m afraid of flying
- Le da miedo conducir de noche = Driving at night scares him/her
Spanish often uses this kind of thing + dar miedo + person structure instead of matching English word-for-word.
Why are both A mi hermana and le there? Don’t they both mean to my sister?
Yes, they both point to the same person, and that is normal in Spanish. This is called indirect object doubling.
- A mi hermana identifies or emphasizes who the feeling affects
- le is the indirect object pronoun that Spanish normally uses with dar miedo
So A mi hermana le da miedo aterrizar is not redundant in a bad way; it is standard Spanish.
Compare:
In sentences like this, Spanish usually includes the pronoun even when the full noun is also stated.
What exactly does le refer to here?
Le refers to my sister.
In this sentence:
- A mi hermana = to my sister
- le = to her
It is an indirect object pronoun. With dar miedo, the person who experiences the fear is treated as an indirect object.
So the structure is:
- something
- da miedo
- to someone
- da miedo
Example:
- Le da miedo aterrizar = Landing scares her
Why is it aterrizar and not de aterrizar after miedo?
Because with dar miedo, Spanish normally uses a bare infinitive directly:
So:
- A mi hermana le da miedo aterrizar
This is different from another common pattern:
- Mi hermana tiene miedo de aterrizar
That is also correct.
So both are possible:
- Le da miedo aterrizar
- Tiene miedo de aterrizar
They are just built differently.
Could the sentence also be Mi hermana tiene miedo de aterrizar?
Why is it esta vez and not la esta vez or this one time with an article?
Because esta vez is the normal fixed expression for this time.
Examples:
- Esta vez no voy = This time I’m not going
- Esta vez salió bien = This time it went well
Spanish does not use an article here. So:
- esta vez = this time
- esa vez = that time
- cada vez = each time / every time
Why is the verb tocó in the preterite?
Because it refers to a completed action at a specific moment in the past: the plane touched the runway once.
So the sentence presents the landing as a finished event:
- this time, the plane touched down very smoothly
If you used the imperfect (tocaba), it would suggest an ongoing, repeated, or background action, which does not fit as well here.
Does tocó la pista literally mean touched the runway? Is that a normal way to talk about landing?
Yes. Literally, tocar means to touch, so el avión tocó la pista means the plane touched the runway.
In context, this naturally refers to the moment of landing, so in English you might translate it as:
- the plane touched the runway
- the plane touched down
- the plane landed
It is a normal and vivid way to describe the landing itself, especially the exact moment of contact.
Why does it say muy suavemente? Could Spanish also say suave or sin problemas?
Suavemente is the adverb form of suave, so it means smoothly / gently / softly.
- suave = adjective
- suavemente = adverb
Since it describes how the plane touched the runway, Spanish uses the adverb:
You could say other things, but they mean slightly different things:
- tocó la pista con suavidad = touched the runway smoothly/gently
- aterrizó suavemente = landed smoothly
- sin problemas = without problems
So suavemente specifically describes the manner of the touchdown.
Could the sentence say aterrizó muy suavemente instead of tocó la pista muy suavemente?
Why is it el avión and not just avión?
Because Spanish usually uses the definite article with nouns when referring to a specific, known thing in the situation.
Here, we are talking about the plane involved in that landing:
- el avión tocó la pista
This is more natural in Spanish than leaving the article out.
Spanish uses articles more often than English does.
Is mi hermana the subject of the first part of the sentence?
No. In grammatical terms, mi hermana is not the subject there.
In:
- A mi hermana le da miedo aterrizar
the thing causing the fear is aterrizar. So the real subject is the infinitive idea aterrizar.
A simplified way to see it is:
- Aterrizar le da miedo a mi hermana
- Landing scares my sister
So:
- aterrizar = subject
- a mi hermana / le = the person affected
This is one reason the structure can feel unusual to English speakers.
Why is pero used here? Does it imply contrast?
Yes. Pero means but, and it introduces a contrast.
The contrast is:
- normally, landing scares the sister
- however, this time the plane touched down very smoothly
So the second half does not say that she stopped being afraid; it simply contrasts her fear with the fact that this particular landing was smooth.
Can a mi hermana be moved, or does it have to stay at the beginning?
It can be moved. Spanish is flexible here.
- A mi hermana le da miedo aterrizar
- Le da miedo aterrizar a mi hermana
- Aterrizar le da miedo a mi hermana
The first version is the most natural and clear in many contexts. Putting A mi hermana first helps establish right away who we are talking about.
So the position can change, but the original word order is very standard.
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