Great question! This is a regionalism. Pamela is from Saltillo and she uses this construction, but you are right that the standard grammatical structure is "déjame pensar". You may hear this variation in one or two other videos.
"Deber" and "deber de" have different meanings. "Deber" is used to indicate obligation or necessity (Juan debe presentarse al trabajo mañana), while "deber de" indicates supposition, probability or conjecture. That is way it is used in the video - "Debe de estar ahí adentro." - It must be in here. Hopes that helps!
Thanks
Gracias
Wonderful 🎉😢
Hola🎉! Gracias❤
Your easier conversations really helps me a lot. Thank you.
Glad you like them!
Sois fabulosos❤
Me encanta mucho este video. Muchas Gracias
De nada!
Yo necesito mirar mucho de videos asi
Gracias😊
Hola desde la isla de Bali
muchísimas gracias ❤❤
Mucho gracias!🙂💖👍🕊🌺🌼🌻🌿🍓
1:16 "déjame pienso"? Or "déjame pensar"? Isn't the second one correct?
Great question! This is a regionalism. Pamela is from Saltillo and she uses this construction, but you are right that the standard grammatical structure is "déjame pensar". You may hear this variation in one or two other videos.
@@SpanishPlayground thank you!
4:10 "debe de estar..." why do we use "de" after the verb "deber"? Shouldn't it be omitted? I mean "debe estar..."
"Deber" and "deber de" have different meanings. "Deber" is used to indicate obligation or necessity (Juan debe presentarse al trabajo mañana), while "deber de" indicates supposition, probability or conjecture. That is way it is used in the video - "Debe de estar ahí adentro." - It must be in here. Hopes that helps!
@@SpanishPlayground now i got it. Thank you so much!
I don't understand what you are saying in Spanish it's hard.
Gracias 😘