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Caminó

Caminó is a word in Spanish that appears most often as a conjugated verb form. Specifically, caminó is the third-person singular preterite (simple past) of the verb caminar, meaning “he walked” or “she walked” (and formally “you walked” when used with usted). The infinitive form is caminar, and the noun camino means “path” or “road,” which is etymologically related but orthographically distinct.

In usage, caminó signals a completed action in the past within a narrative. It is contrasted with

Caminó can also occur as a title or stylistic element in artistic or cultural contexts, where it

See also: caminar, camino, caminante, pretérito. Notes on pronunciation and grammar vary by dialect, but the

other
tenses
of
caminar,
such
as
camina
(present),
caminaba
(imperfect),
and
marqué
camin
é
(first-person
preterite).
The
accent
in
caminó
indicates
the
stressed
syllable
and
the
past
tense,
as
required
by
Spanish
orthography.
may
be
used
as
a
proper
noun
or
shorthand
for
related
phrases.
Such
uses
are
context-dependent
and
not
standardized,
and
they
are
typically
found
in
Spanish-language
works
or
discourse
where
the
word
is
intended
to
carry
a
literary
or
formal
nuance.
standard
interpretation
remains
the
same:
caminó
denotes
a
completed
third-person
past
action
of
walking
in
Spanish.