| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| 1st person | me me | nos us |
| 2nd person | te you | |
| 3rd person | le him/her/you formal | les them/you plural |
Description
An indirect object is a person who receives the action of a verb indirectly; it says to whom or for whom something is done. In Spanish the indirect object is usually preceded by the preposition a and in English by the preposition to. If there is an indirect object in a sentence, it will usually be accompanied by the indirect object pronoun. The indirect object pronoun must match the person and number of the indirect object. In the sentence below, los hijos is the indirect object, accompanied by the pronoun les; both of which are third person plural.
Es más difícil aquí porque aquí les dan más privilegios a los hijos.
It’s harder here because here they give children more privileges.
Also, the indirect object pronoun may used by itself to replace an indirect object. For example, a los hijos can be removed from the previous sentence to resulting in:
Es más difícil aquí porque aquí les dan más privilegios.
It’s harder here because here they give them more privileges.
Placement
There are two places where indirect object pronouns can be placed.
- Before a conjugated verb
- Attached to the end of the verb, ONLY IF the verb is not conjugated, such as infinitives or gerunds or if the verb is an affirmative informal command.
In first example, the indirect object pronoun me is found before the conjugated verb daba. In the second example, the the indirect object pronoun leis found before the conjugated verb da. In the third example, the the indirect object pronoun leis attached to the infinitive decir.