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Complicó

Complicó is the third-person singular form of the Spanish verb complicar in the preterite indicative. It denotes that someone or something (él, ella, or usted in formal address) made a situation more complex, difficult, or involved in the past. As a preterite form, it signals a completed action.

Grammatical notes: Complicar is an -ar verb, and its preterite endings for the third person singular are

Etymology: Complicar comes from the combination of com- (together) and complicare, from Latin acroasis to fold

Usage and nuance: Complicó often implies that an action increased complexity, confusion, or difficulty. It can

Related forms: The base verb is complicar; related terms include complicación (noun: complication), complicado (adjective: complicated),

See also: complicar, complicación, complicado, complicadamente.

Examples:

- La lluvia complicó el viaje. (The rain made the trip more difficult.)

- El comité complicó el proceso al exigir más documentos.

-ó,
yielding
complicó.
The
form
is
commonly
used
with
subjects
such
as
él,
ella,
or
usted
to
describe
past
events
that
changed
the
state
of
affairs
by
adding
complications.
or
entwine,
and
has
developed
in
Spanish
to
mean
to
make
something
more
complex
or
entangled.
be
used
with
direct
objects
(la
situación,
el
proceso,
el
viaje)
or
with
idiomatic
constructions
where
a
previously
simple
matter
became
problematic.
and
complicadamente
(adverb:
in
a
complicated
manner).
The
imperfect
and
other
tenses
of
complicar
yield
related
forms
such
as
complicaba,
complicaría,
complicará,
etc.