Hi Scratch, The personal pronoun "ti" never carries an accent mark. If you are looking for an authoritative source, you can always check with the Diccionario panhispánico de dudas (DPD) published by the Real Academia Española (RAE). The RAE itself is part of an association of 22 Academias worldwide charged with setting the standards for the Spanish language. Here is a direct link to the page ...
ti This is what is called a disjunctional or prepositional pronoun. That is to say that it is the pronominal form that you will find following a preposition. In your example above, "a ti" is a restatement of the indirect object pronoun, and it is added in order give emphasis or clarity to the statement.
ti This is what is called a disjunctional or prepositional pronoun. That is to say that it is the pronominal form that you will find following a preposition. In your example above, "a ti" is a restatement of the indirect object pronoun, and it is added in order give emphasis or clarity to the statement.
I sometimes here the phrase "para ti". I just wanted to know what the difference is between this and "para tu". Or when do we use ti instead of tu. I asked my professor this before but she said it needed a whole session. So I never really got to know...
Ti can only be used as the object of a prepositional phrase.. usted can be used as an object of the prepositional phrase. ti and tú are only used for you informally, while usted is used for you formal Spanish has other personal pronouns meaning you such as te, vos. vosotros, vosotras, and ustedes. This chart might help put them into prospective.
Tí & Te- both meaning 'you' ? Can someone please explain the grammatical use of 'tí' ? And why/when that use intead of 'te' Examples: Los dias se pasan sin ti, Las noches se alargan sin ti Why is it ' tí ' in those two senten...
When do you use A ti and A mi? Are they only used with indirect object pronouns? Can they be used with direct object pronouns? Need to know more, my books are not giving me enough information. Thank you, I'm 70 and taking spanish classes, and never h...