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Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-16 08:40:05 -05:00

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24. The Verb "Conocer"

Source: video

Conocer also means "to know" — but specifically, to be familiar with or acquainted with people, places, or things. Unlike saber (which implies complete factual knowledge), conocer implies acquaintance.

Key Rules

  • Use conocer for being familiar with people, places, or things.
  • Conjugates regularly except in yo: conozco (irregular -zco form).
  • Use the personal a before people: Conozco a Juan.
  • Replace people/places/things with direct object pronouns (lo, la, los, las).

Conjugation / Pattern Tables

conocer — to know (be familiar with) — present indicative

Pronoun Form
yo conozco
conoces
él/ella conoce
nosotros conocemos
vosotros conocéis
ellos conocen

Examples

Spanish English
¿Conoces la ciudad de Las Vegas? Are you familiar with the city of Las Vegas?
Sí, yo conozco la ciudad. Yes, I'm familiar with the city.
¿Conoces a John? Are you familiar with John?
Sí, yo conozco a John. Yes, I know John.
Sí, yo lo conozco. Yes, I know him.
Él conoce a mi abuelo. He knows my grandfather.
Yo conozco los libros. I'm familiar with the books.
Tú quieres conocer el país. You want to be familiar with the country.

Notes & Gotchas

  • Saber vs conocer: ¿Sabes la ciudad? would imply you know it top-to-bottom (people, streets, food) — impossible. Use conocer for places.
  • The personal a is required before people: conocer a [persona].
  • Conocer can take an infinitive ("you want to get to know the country"), but it most commonly takes a noun.
  • Conocer in past tense often means "to meet for the first time."