Breakdown of Mi hermana quiere una funda nueva para el edredón porque la otra ya está vieja.
Questions & Answers about Mi hermana quiere una funda nueva para el edredón porque la otra ya está vieja.
Why is it mi hermana and not la hermana de mí or mía hermana?
Mi is the normal possessive adjective meaning my, and it goes before the noun: mi hermana.
- mi hermana = my sister
- la hermana de mí is not natural Spanish
- mía is a possessive pronoun/adjective used differently, as in la hermana mía or simply la mía, but that is not the basic, neutral way to say my sister
So for straightforward possession before a noun, Spanish uses mi.
Why is the verb quiere?
Because the subject is mi hermana, which is she / my sister, so the verb querer has to be conjugated in the third person singular of the present tense:
- yo quiero = I want
- tú quieres = you want
- él/ella quiere = he/she wants
So:
- Mi hermana quiere... = My sister wants...
What does funda mean here?
Why is nueva after funda?
In Spanish, descriptive adjectives usually come after the noun, so:
- una funda nueva = a new cover
That is the most neutral word order.
If you put the adjective before the noun, una nueva funda, it can sound a bit more like another/new replacement cover, with slightly more emphasis on the idea of newness as a change rather than simply describing it.
So una funda nueva is very natural here.
Why is it para el edredón?
Para here shows purpose or intended use:
In other words, it is a cover meant for the duvet.
A learner may also hear more idiomatic expressions such as:
- funda de edredón
- in Spain, very often funda nórdica
But para el edredón is perfectly understandable and clearly expresses what the cover is for.
Why is there el in para el edredón?
Why does it say porque and not por qué?
What does la otra mean, and why isn’t funda repeated?
Why is it está vieja instead of es vieja?
This is a very useful ser vs estar point.
Here, está vieja suggests the cover is worn out, showing age, or has become old from use. That fits the idea that she wants a new one because the current one is no longer in good condition.
- estar viejo/a often suggests a state or condition something is in
- ser viejo/a more often describes something as old by age or nature
For an object that has become shabby or worn, está vieja sounds very natural.
What does ya add in ya está vieja?
Ya here means already, by now, or at this point.
It adds the idea that the condition has already happened or is now clearly true:
- está vieja = it is old / worn out
- ya está vieja = it is already old / worn out now
So it strengthens the reason for needing a replacement.
Could Spanish use antigua instead of vieja here?
Usually vieja is better here.
- vieja = old, worn, no longer in good condition
- antigua = old in age, ancient, antique, from an earlier period
For a duvet cover that needs replacing, vieja is the natural choice because it suggests used and worn. Antigua would sound odd unless you were talking about it as an old-fashioned or antique object.
Why is there no personal a after quiere?
Because the direct object is a thing, not a specific person.
- quiere una funda = wants a cover
The personal a is normally used before specific people (and sometimes personified animals):
- Quiere a su hermana = He/She loves his/her sister
- Busca a su madre = He/She is looking for his/her mother
But with an object like una funda, there is no a.
What exactly is edredón in Spanish from Spain?
In Spain, edredón usually refers to a thick bed covering, often something like a duvet or quilted comforter.
Depending on region and context, you may also hear:
- nórdico = duvet / duvet insert
- funda nórdica = duvet cover
So a learner in Spain should know that bed-linen vocabulary can vary a bit, but edredón is a very normal word and will be understood.
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