Breakdown of ¿Te da igual ir en coche o en tren?
Questions & Answers about ¿Te da igual ir en coche o en tren?
What does te da igual mean literally, and how should I understand it?
Why is there a te in te da igual?
Te is the indirect object pronoun, meaning to you.
- Me da igual = It makes no difference to me
- Te da igual = It makes no difference to you
- Le da igual = It makes no difference to him/her/you (formal)
Spanish uses this pronoun because the idea is framed as something that matters or does not matter to someone.
Why is it da and not dan?
Because da igual is usually treated as an impersonal expression, or because the whole action ir en coche o en tren is being treated as one idea.
So Spanish uses singular:
- Te da igual ir en coche o en tren
Even though there are two options, the sentence is really about the choice as a whole, not about two separate things agreeing with the verb.
Why is ir in the infinitive?
Because after da igual, Spanish often uses an infinitive to talk about an action in a general way.
So:
This is very common in Spanish:
The infinitive works a bit like going, eating, staying, etc. in English.
Why do we say en coche and en tren?
Why is there no article in en coche or en tren?
Because when Spanish talks about transport in a general way, it usually does not use an article.
So you say:
- Voy en coche
- Vamos en tren
Not normally:
- Voy en el coche if you just mean by car
However, en el coche is possible when you mean in the car, referring to a specific car:
- Estoy en el coche = I’m in the car
- Voy en el coche de mi hermano = I’m going in my brother’s car
So:
- en coche = by car, as a mode of transport
- en el coche = in the car, a specific vehicle
Is coche specifically Spanish from Spain?
Could the word order be changed?
Yes. Spanish word order is fairly flexible here.
For example, these are all possible:
- ¿Te da igual ir en coche o en tren?
- ¿Te da igual ir en tren o en coche?
- ¿Ir en coche o en tren te da igual?
The first one is the most natural and neutral.
Changing the order usually changes only the focus or rhythm, not the basic meaning.
Is da igual the same as no importa or da lo mismo?
They are very similar, but there are small differences in tone.
- Me da igual = I don’t mind / It makes no difference to me
- Me da lo mismo = It’s the same to me / I don’t mind
- No me importa = I don’t care / It doesn’t matter to me
Me da igual and me da lo mismo are often very close.
No me importa can sometimes sound a bit stronger, depending on tone, and in some contexts it may sound more like I don’t care.
Also, te es igual exists, but te da igual is much more common in everyday speech.
How would I answer this question naturally?
Is te informal? How would I say this formally?
Why is there an opening question mark ¿?
Because standard Spanish uses two question marks:
- one at the beginning: ¿
- one at the end: ?
So the correct punctuation is:
This helps the reader know from the start that the sentence is a question.
In informal texting, native speakers sometimes leave out the opening mark, but in correct written Spanish it should be included.
Could o ever change to u? Why is it still o here?
Yes. The conjunction o changes to u before words that begin with an o sound, to avoid repetition of the same sound.
- siete u ocho
- uno u otro
But here it stays o because the next word is en, not a word beginning with an o sound:
- ¿Te da igual ir en coche o en tren?
So o is correct here.
What is the grammatical role of ir en coche o en tren in the sentence?
It is the thing that makes no difference. In practical learner terms, it is the idea that the phrase te da igual is referring to.
You can think of the structure like this:
- te = to you
- da igual = is all the same / makes no difference
- ir en coche o en tren = going by car or by train
So the sentence means that the choice between those two actions is irrelevant to the person being asked.
Does this sentence sound neutral, or could it sound rude?
By itself, it sounds neutral and natural. It is a normal way to ask whether someone has a preference.
Whether it sounds rude depends mostly on tone of voice and context. For example:
But the sentence you gave is perfectly normal and polite in everyday conversation.
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