<p>I don't understand all of the ways "lo" is used in Spanish and no one can seem to give me definite answers. Also how "le" and "les" are used, especially when attached on the end of infinitives. Thanks!!!</p>
<p>Lo is a masculine direct object pronoun. Such as Los muchachos tienen el libro. > Los muchachos lo tienen.
Le and les are indirect obj pronouns and when attaching them to an infinitive you need to some form of the progressive tesnse ( conjugated estar + stem + ando, iendo, yendo, or irregular ) or a conjugated verb and an infinitiv.
EX. Los muchachos estan tiendole.
Van a escribirmelas.</p>
<p>Does that make sense? I'm only in my second year of spanish but I've taken eight years of german and it makes it click faster.</p>
<p>Also, the pronouns can be attached to the end of a direct command, such as "D</p>
<p>Thanks! Anyone else???</p>
<p>glitterhairdye is that true?? my span teacher said we cannot attach obj. pronouns to the gerundives</p>
<p>hey that there was my 800th post! how CC-ish</p>
<p>lol</p>
<p>congrats :)</p>
<p>I think it's true lol. That's all we've been doing in spanish for the past week because I'm surrounded by idiots. Haha no one in my class can seem to under stand the concept. Our teacher gave us five rules for double object pronouns:
1. Subject + direct + indirect + verb.
2a. subject + direct + indirect + conj. estar + verb with ando etc.
2b. sub. + conj. estar + verb wuith and etc and attch the direct and indirect
3a. sub. + direct + indirect + conj. verb + infinitiv
3b. sub + conj. verb + infinitiv with direct and indirect attached.
4. somethin gbaout commands that we haven't done yet.</p>
<p>out of curiousity, what level spanish are you guys doing this in?</p>