Inklingo

tráeme

TRAH-eh-mehˈtɾa.e.me

tráeme means Bring me in Spanish (Informal command (you bring me something)).

Bring me

Also: Get me
Verb Form (Command)A1irregular (stem change in some forms) er
A simple illustration showing one hand gently offering a single red flower to another open, waiting hand.
infinitivetraer
gerundtrayendo
past Participletraído

📝 In Action

Tráeme la sal, por favor.

A1

Bring me the salt, please.

Si vas a la tienda, tráeme un periódico.

A2

If you go to the store, bring me a newspaper.

¡Tráeme el balón! Lo necesito para jugar.

A1

Bring me the ball! I need it to play.

Word Connections

Synonyms

  • acércame (bring closer to me)
  • dame (give me)

Antonyms

  • llévame (take me)

Common Collocations

  • tráeme algo de tomarbring me something to drink

🔄 Conjugations

indicative

present

él/ella/ustedtrae
yotraigo
traes
ellos/ellas/ustedestraen
nosotrostraemos
vosotrostraéis

imperfect

él/ella/ustedtraía
yotraía
traías
ellos/ellas/ustedestraían
nosotrostraíamos
vosotrostraíais

preterite

él/ella/ustedtrajo
yotraje
trajiste
ellos/ellas/ustedestrajeron
nosotrostrajimos
vosotrostrajisteis

subjunctive

present

él/ella/ustedtraiga
yotraiga
traigas
ellos/ellas/ustedestraigan
nosotrostraigamos
vosotrostraigáis

imperfect

él/ella/ustedtrajera
yotrajera
trajeras
ellos/ellas/ustedestrajeran
nosotrostrajéramos
vosotrostrajerais

✏️ Quick Practice

Quick Quiz: tráeme

Question 1 of 1

Which sentence correctly uses 'tráeme' in a casual conversation?

📚 More Resources

👥 Word Family
traer(to bring)Verb
me(me (as an object))Pronoun
tráigame(bring me (formal))Verb form
🎵 Rhymes
llámamedámelo
📚 Etymology

The verb 'traer' comes from the Latin verb *trahere*, meaning 'to pull' or 'to drag.' The pronoun 'me' comes directly from the Latin object pronoun *me*. The two words were joined together in the command form.

First recorded: Medieval Latin/Early Spanish (as separate elements)

Cognates (Related words)

Portuguese: trazerItalian: trarre

💡 Master Spanish

Take your Spanish to the next level. Read 200+ illustrated and narrated Spanish stories tailored to your level with the Inklingo app!

Frequently Asked Questions

Is 'tráeme' one word or two?

It is one single word in Spanish. When you give a positive command (like 'bring!') and attach an object pronoun (like 'me'), they must be written together as one unit.

If I want to say 'Bring it to me,' where does 'it' go?

If 'it' is masculine (el libro), you would say 'Tráemelo' (Bring me it). If 'it' is feminine (la llave), you would say 'Tráemela' (Bring me it). The pronoun for 'it' also attaches to the end, making the word even longer!