# 23. The Verb "Saber" > Source: [video](https://youtube.com/watch?v=YHDZSHCt1DE&t=5812s) `Saber` means "to know" — but specifically, knowing **factual information** or **knowing how to do something**. The video frames it as the cognitive cousin of `ser`: just as `ser` describes factual identity, `saber` describes factual knowledge. ## Key Rules - Use `saber` for factual information (dates, times, facts). - Use `saber` for knowing how to do something (skills, abilities). - Conjugates regularly except in **yo: sé** (with an accent to distinguish from `se`, the reflexive/IOP). - Spanish drops the word `cómo` ("how") in "I know how to ___": `Yo sé hablar español` (not `sé cómo hablar`). ## Conjugation / Pattern Tables ### saber — to know (factual) — present indicative | Pronoun | Form | |---|---| | yo | sé | | tú | sabes | | él/ella | sabe | | nosotros | sabemos | | vosotros | sabéis | | ellos | saben | ## Examples | Spanish | English | |---|---| | Yo sé hablar español. | I know how to speak Spanish. | | Tú sabes la hora. | You know the time. | | Él sabe nadar. | He knows how to swim. | | Yo sé hablar inglés. | I know how to speak English. | | Tú sabes tocar el piano. | You know how to play the piano. | | Él sabe cocinar bien. | He knows how to cook well. | | Nosotros sabemos la respuesta. | We know the answer. | | Ellos saben la verdad. | They know the truth. | ## Notes & Gotchas - The accent on `sé` is critical: `se` (no accent) is a reflexive/object pronoun. - `Saber + infinitive` = "to know how to [verb]". Don't insert `cómo`. - `Saber` ≠ `conocer`. `Saber` is for facts and skills; `conocer` is for being acquainted with people, places, or things (next chapter).