Corazon Partio – Bilingual Lyrics Spanish/English
Lyrics & Translation
Key Vocabulary
Vocabulary | Meanings |
---|---|
corazón /koɾaˈθon/ (Spain) /koɾaˈson/ (LatAm) A1 |
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partir /paɾˈtiɾ/ B1 |
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dolor /doˈloɾ/ A2 |
|
vida /ˈbiða/ A1 |
|
mentir /menˈtiɾ/ B1 |
|
sentir /senˈtiɾ/ A2 |
|
curar /kuˈɾaɾ/ B1 |
|
dejar /deˈxaɾ/ A2 |
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abandonar /aβan̪doˈnaɾ/ B1 |
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emoción /emoˈθjon/ (Spain) /emoˈsjon/ (LatAm) B1 |
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noche /ˈnot͡ʃe/ A1 |
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primavera /pɾimaˈβeɾa/ A2 |
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luna /ˈluna/ A2 |
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frío /ˈfɾi.o/ A1 |
|
ilusión /iluˈsjon/ B2 |
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profundo /pɾoˈfun̪do/ B1 |
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alma /ˈalma/ B2 |
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tormenta /toɾˈmen̪ta/ B1 |
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calma /ˈkalma/ B1 |
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limosna /liˈmosna/ B2 |
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Key Grammar Structures
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Tiritas pa' este corazón partio'
➔ Colloquial shortening / Apocope
➔ This line uses informal shortenings: ""pa'"" for "para" (for) and ""partio'"" for "partido" (broken). This is common in everyday Spanish speech and song lyrics to reflect natural pronunciation.
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Miénteme aunque sea, dime que algo queda entre nosotros dos
➔ Imperative forms with attached pronouns + "aunque sea"
➔ The verbs ""Miénteme"" (lie to me) and ""dime"" (tell me) are affirmative imperative forms with attached indirect object pronouns. ""aunque sea"" means "even if it is" or "at least".
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Que en tu habitación nunca sale el sol, ni existe el tiempo ni el dolor
➔ Double/Multiple Negation ("nunca... ni... ni...")
➔ In Spanish, it's common to use multiple negative words in the same sentence to reinforce the negation. Here, ""nunca"" (never) is followed by ""ni... ni..."" (neither... nor...), meaning "never... neither... nor...".
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Para qué me curaste cuando estaba herio' si hoy me dejas de nuevo el corazón partio'
➔ Interrogative "Para qué" + Past Tense Contrast (Preterite vs. Imperfect) + Conditional Clause
➔ ""Para qué"" means "For what purpose?" or "Why?". ""curaste"" is Preterite (completed action), while ""estaba herio'"" (from "herido") is Imperfect (ongoing state), showing a contrast between a single past action and a continuous past state. The ""si"" introduces a conditional clause.
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¿Quién llenará de primaveras este enero y bajará la luna para que juguemos?
➔ Future Simple Tense + Subjunctive in Purpose Clauses ("para que")
➔ ""llenará"" and ""bajará"" are verbs in the Future Simple tense, used to ask about future actions or predictions. ""para que juguemos"" uses the subjunctive mood (""juguemos"") after ""para que"" (in order that/so that) to express purpose.
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Dar solamente aquello que te sobra Nunca fue compartir, sino dar limosna, amor
➔ Neuter Demonstrative Pronoun ("aquello") + Verb "sobrar" + Conjunction "sino"
➔ ""aquello"" refers to a vague or unspecified idea (that which). ""te sobra"" (literally "it is left over for you") means "what you have in excess" or "what you don't need." ""sino"" means "but rather" and is used to correct or contrast a negative statement with an affirmative one.
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Si no lo sabes tú, te lo digo yo
➔ Double Object Pronouns + Emphatic/Redundant Subject Pronouns
➔ ""te lo"" shows the order of indirect object pronoun (IO, ""te"") followed by direct object pronoun (DO, ""lo""). In Spanish, subject pronouns (like ""tú"" and ""yo"") are often omitted, but they are used here for emphasis, like saying "If YOU don't know it, then I will tell YOU."
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Después de la tormenta siempre llega la calma, pero sé que después de ti Después de ti no hay nada
➔ Impersonal Expression "No hay nada" (Total Negation)
➔ ""no hay nada"" is a common impersonal expression meaning "there is nothing." It combines the impersonal verb ""hay"" (there is/are) with the negative word ""no"" and the indefinite pronoun ""nada"" (nothing) to express complete absence.
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Llévame si quieres a perder a ningún destino, sin ningún porqué
➔ Imperative with Attached Pronoun + Conditional Clause + Negative Indefinite Adjective ("ningún")
➔ ""Llévame"" is an affirmative imperative with an attached direct object pronoun. ""si quieres"" is a conditional clause meaning "if you want." ""ningún"" (no/none) is a negative indefinite adjective used before a masculine singular noun (like ""destino"" or ""porqué"").