When asking for Angela’s phone number why is it “a Angela” and not “de Angela”
Robert asking for Angela’s phone number
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Robert asking for Angela’s phone number
Hola Daniel and John
The personal a, as you say, John, is when we have a transitive verb and we have a "person" being the direct object, for example: "Yo vi a Luisa en el parque" - Ver here is a transitive verb and the direct object is Luisa, a person, therefore we need "a Luisa".
In this sentence, though, it is different:
Here we have a transitive verb "pide", a direct object "el número de teléfono" (what does he ask for? a telephone number) and an indirect object "a Ángela".
Think of this other sentence with the same structure:
(a Ángela is an indirect object here too)
Now, Daniel was saying why it is not "de Ángela"; You could say this as well:
but this means "Roberto asks for Angela's telephone number" - he is not asking her for her telephone number. It'd be simply saying he is asking for her number. This "de" would be a "possessive de". (Angela's number).
I hope this clarified it.
Saludos
Inma
Hello Daniel,
This is called "the personal a" and it doesn't really translate. There is no equivalent in English but it is an important rule in Spanish.
When the direct object of the sentence is a human being - or a pet, you have to insert an "a" between the verb and the person's name. The same applies if you are talking about more than one person (yo escucho a ellos- I hear them).
Saludos. John
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