How to Say "taken out" in Spanish
The Spanish word for “taken out” is “sacado” — A1 level. This is a very common word in everyday Spanish.

Examples
Hemos sacado el coche del garaje.
We have taken the car out of the garage.
¿Ya has sacado las entradas para el concierto?
Have you already gotten the tickets for the concert?
El informe había sacado conclusiones muy interesantes.
The report had drawn very interesting conclusions.
Forming Perfect Tenses
Use 'sacado' with a form of the verb 'haber' (to have) to talk about actions completed in the past, like 'He sacado' (I have taken out).
Spelling Change for Sound
The base verb 'sacar' changes 'c' to 'qu' before 'e' or 'i' (like in 'saqué' or 'saques') to keep the hard 'k' sound.
Agreement with 'Haber'
Mistake: “La hemos sacada.”
Correction: La hemos sacado. When used with 'haber', the past participle always stays masculine singular ('sacado'), regardless of the gender of the thing you took out.
Other Meanings of “sacado”
“sacado” can also mean:
- describing an item's status(B1)
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