Breakdown of Ayer choqué con mi vecino al salir del ascensor.
Questions & Answers about Ayer choqué con mi vecino al salir del ascensor.
Why is it choqué and not chocé?
Why is choqué in the preterite tense?
It is in the preterite because the sentence describes a single completed event in the past: yesterday I bumped into my neighbor.
Spanish often uses the preterite for:
- completed actions
- specific events
- actions tied to a finished time expression such as ayer
So Ayer choqué... is the natural choice.
Why is yo not included?
Spanish often leaves out subject pronouns when they are clear from the verb ending. The ending -é in choqué already tells you the subject is I.
So:
- Ayer choqué con mi vecino...
- Ayer yo choqué con mi vecino...
Both are possible, but the version without yo is more normal unless you want extra emphasis.
What does chocar con mean here?
Here chocar con means to bump into or to collide with someone or something physically.
So choqué con mi vecino means that there was some kind of physical contact or collision.
Depending on context, chocar con can also be used more figuratively, for example for ideas or personalities that clash, but in this sentence the physical meaning is the natural one.
Why do we use con after choqué?
Because chocar commonly takes the preposition con when you say what or who you collided with:
- chocar con alguien
- chocar con algo
So:
This is just the normal Spanish pattern, even though English may use different phrasing depending on the context.
What does al salir mean exactly?
Al + infinitive is a very common Spanish structure meaning when doing, upon doing, or as someone does something.
- when leaving
- as I was leaving
- upon leaving
In this sentence, al salir del ascensor tells you the moment when the collision happened.
Why is it al salir and not cuando salí?
Both are possible, but they are slightly different in style.
- al salir del ascensor = when leaving / upon leaving the elevator
- cuando salí del ascensor = when I left the elevator
Al + infinitive is compact and very natural when one action happens at the moment of another. It often sounds smoother in sentences like this.
Also, with al salir, the subject is normally understood to be the same as in the main verb, so it naturally means when I was leaving the elevator.
Why is it del ascensor and not de el ascensor?
Does ascensor mean elevator?
Could ayer go in a different place in the sentence?
Yes. Spanish word order is flexible, so you could move ayer:
- Ayer choqué con mi vecino al salir del ascensor.
- Choqué con mi vecino ayer al salir del ascensor.
- Choqué ayer con mi vecino al salir del ascensor.
The first version is very natural because it sets the time immediately. Putting ayer first is a common way to frame the whole sentence.
Does mi vecino mean a male neighbor only?
Can vecino mean any neighbor, or only someone living next door?
Vecino usually means a person who lives nearby, especially in the same building, on the same street, or in the same area. It does not have to mean the person literally in the apartment right next to yours.
So mi vecino could be:
- the person next door
- someone else in the building
- someone nearby in the neighborhood
The exact relationship depends on context.
Who is leaving the elevator in al salir del ascensor?
By default, Spanish readers understand it to be the same person as the main subject of choqué, so the natural reading is:
- I bumped into my neighbor when I was leaving the elevator
That is a very common feature of al + infinitive. Unless context clearly says otherwise, the subject is usually the same as the subject of the main clause.
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