Search results
- Both of these words are used to mean let's go and they are both nosotros command forms of the verb ir. The difference is that vámonos is the command form with a pronoun attached. vámonos = vamos + nos (direct object pronoun in 1st person plural)
People also ask
What is the difference between Vamos and Vámonos?
What does 'Vamos' mean in Spanish?
Why do we use Vámonos instead of Vayamos?
What does 'Vamonos a Casa' mean in Spanish?
What does Vámonos mean?
What is the difference between IR and Vamos?
What is the difference between vayamos and vamos? Compare and contrast the definitions and English translations of vayamos and vamos on SpanishDictionary.com, the world's most accurate Spanish-English reference website.
Oct 2, 2015 · I understand that "Let's go" in Spanish is vámonos or vamos depending on the context. However, I have also learned from grammar books that all the "let's..." constructs translate into Spanish using the 1st person plural subjunctive conjugation.
The difference between vamos and vámonos lies in the change in meaning of ir when used pronominally as irse (see se aspectual), which means 'to leave' a place rather than 'to go' to another place. Often this difference can be quite subtle to the untrained ear.
Sep 10, 2023 · What is the difference between Mi hermano va a buscarme a la estación. and Mi hermano me va a bus... What is the difference between cómo estás and qué tal ? What is the difference between esa and ese and eso ? What is the difference between “nuevas” and “nuevo” ? What is the difference between disculpe and ¡Lo siento! ?
- Yangyang Xi
- CEO of Lang-8, Inc.
There are 3 ways in Spanish to use the imperative of verb "ir" for nosotros: 1. ¡vayamos! (or vayámonos) 2. ¡vamos! 3. ¡vámonos! 1. is using the present subjunctive form which is the general rule for all verbs, e.g. "hagamos una fiesta", "abramos las ventanas"...
Nov 5, 2006 · Vamos = Let's go (in every sense of the expression) Vámonos = Let's leave this place Vayamos = Let's go (physically). It's also the present subjuntive form of "we go", in Spanish.
However, it is true that for the affirmative command using the verb "ir" we can use both: vamos and vayamos, the first coinciding with the present tense of ir for nosotros, the second coinciding with the present subjunctive of the verb ir for nosotros.