14

When I'm chasing my baby around the room, I frequently tell him, "I'm gonna get you!" and catch him and tickle him. Is there a similar expression in Spanish? I'd love to find something that can be used everywhere, but regional answers are appreciated as well. It should express that we're playing, not that I'm going to get him because he's in trouble or anything.

JoulSauron
  • 5,450
  • 2
  • 31
  • 49
Rachel
  • 1,820
  • 2
  • 15
  • 22

3 Answers3

10

I would use some variant with pillar:

¡Que te pillo!

¡Te voy a pillar!

But I don't know about the neutrality of the verb "pillar" in other countries (I'm from Spain).

Update:

I would certainly use coger too, but I know it is not "neutral" in many parts of America.

MikMik
  • 5,764
  • 1
  • 23
  • 29
7

In Argentina you would say

'¡Te voy a atrapar!' (prefered)

'¡Te voy a agarrar!'

I think 'Te voy a agarrar' makes it sound like he is in trouble, but not so much, you could still use it.

Nadia
  • 501
  • 3
  • 6
  • 1
    +1 for including te voy a agarrar. Personally though, it doesn't make it sound like the person's in trouble much. As a speaker of Mexican Spanish, it would be my prefered expression. :) – Miguel Feb 28 '12 at 18:07
  • I guess it depends on how you say it, if 'Te voy a agarrar!' in said in a playful way then it's ok. – Nadia Feb 29 '12 at 23:54
  • I chose this answer because it referenced the location it was used, and it seems like it will be the most useful for my area. – Rachel Mar 01 '12 at 02:38
5

Some neutral expessions are:

¡Te atraparé!

¡Te voy a atrapar!

¡No te me escaparás!

Alfredo Osorio
  • 10,650
  • 34
  • 76
  • 119
  • 2
    Neutral, meaning what? I'd never say, and I never hear, "¡te atraparé!" in Spain. I think it's good if we add a note about where our answers apply (as far as we know) for the sake of reference, as @MikMik has done on this same page. – CesarGon Feb 28 '12 at 13:46
  • @CesarGon "atrapar" is pretty neutral. "El gato atrapó al ratón". Look at http://buscon.rae.es/draeI/SrvltConsulta?TIPO_BUS=3&LEMA=atrapar . On the other hand, "pillar" is not used in Mexico for anything. – Alfredo Osorio Feb 28 '12 at 13:53
  • I don't dispute that. But, as an idiom, I'd never use that, and I never hear that, in the context described by the OP. I understand and am able to use the verb "atrapar", but it sounds terribly poetic for everyday speech, and I bet this is extensive to the average Spaniard. Hence my complain about your claim for neutrality and the lack of a regional qualifier. – CesarGon Feb 28 '12 at 13:56
  • 1
    I agree it sounds more neutral (I guess everywhere but in Spain) – DarkAjax Feb 28 '12 at 15:42