Se enfático en deporte: elige bien
Reflexivos enfáticos en deporte: elige cuándo usar se para énfasis en 3 frases.
DannisCompleta: Antes del partido, todos los aficionados ______ el himno de memoria.
Correct: 0/6
Hints for this Quiz
Think: which one sounds like "I know it BY HEART"? In Spanish they often add SE for emphasis.
In colloquial Spanish, "saberse" emphasizes that you know something BY HEART / completely: me sé el himno. At B1 level, these colloquial uses are often practiced in sports contexts.
In sports slang, the form with SE often means "did it completely / powerfully."
The idiom "comerse el partido" means "to completely dominate the match / eat the opponent alive in the game." SE here adds the idea of "totally, with intensity."
If you want to stress "I drained the bottle," choose the form with SE.
"Beberse" = to drink UP / finish the drink completely. This is an emphatic reflexive: the action is done fully, to the end.
The clitics go as a pair: first SE, then LO/LA.
Fixed colloquial formula: "No me/te/se lo creo" = "I/you/he can’t believe it." Order of clitics: SE + LO/LA + VERB.
Look for the form with SE that adds the nuance "we finished it / drank it all."
Context: commenting on a match with friends.
"Nos bebimos" sounds more colloquial and emphatic: it highlights that the action is finished (you drank it all). These nuances are often practiced in tasks with expresiones en contexto.
Fixed formula with two clitics: ME + LO + CREO → roughly "I can’t believe my eyes!"
Colloquial reaction of surprise: "¡No me lo creo!" (literally "I don’t believe it to myself")—a fixed expression. In Spain it’s very typical to watch partidos in a bar, so this is a natural context for this phrase.
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