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Spanish Phrase

Haz clic en el enlace de tu correo.

/aθ ˈklik en el enˈlase ðe tu koˈre.o/
Meaning"Click on the link in your email."
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Meaning

The sentence is a direct instruction meaning ‘Click on the link in your email.’ It is used when you want someone to follow a hyperlink that was sent to them via email, often for verification or to access further information.

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When to use

Use this phrase in digital contexts – onboarding tutorials, password‑reset emails, newsletters, or any situation where you need the listener to open a link that arrived in their inbox.

Grammar Breakdown

Hazclicenelenlacedetucorreo

1

Imperative of hacer

‘Haz’ is the informal affirmative imperative of the verb ‘hacer’, used here to give a direct command.

2

Clic as a verb phrase

‘Clic’ is a borrowed noun from English; in Spanish it is commonly paired with ‘haz’ to form the verb‑like expression ‘haz clic’.

3

Preposition en

‘En’ introduces the location where the action should happen – in this case, the link.

4

Definite article el

‘El’ agrees in gender and number with the masculine singular noun ‘enlace’.

5

Possessive tu

‘Tu’ is a possessive adjective meaning ‘your’; it does not carry an accent.

🗨In Conversation

A

¿Ya recibiste el mensaje de confirmación?

Did you already receive the confirmation message?

Sí, solo falta que haga clic en el enlace de tu correo.

Yes, I just need to click on the link in your email.

B

Common Mistakes

  • Haces clic en el enlace de tu correo.

    ‘Haces’ is the present indicative of ‘hacer’; the correct command form is ‘Haz’.

  • Haz click en el enlace de tu correo.

    In Spanish the noun is spelled ‘clic’, not ‘click’.

  • Haz clic en el link de tu correo.

    Mixing English ‘link’ with Spanish grammar sounds unpolished; use ‘enlace’ or ‘vínculo’.

Alternatives

  • Pulsa el enlace de tu correo.

    Press the link in your email.

  • Haz clic en el link de tu email.

    Click on the link of your email.

  • Haz clic en el vínculo de tu correo.

    Click on the hyperlink in your email.

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Cultural Tip

In most Spanish‑speaking countries ‘clic’ is widely accepted, especially in tech contexts, but in more formal writing you might prefer ‘pulse’ or ‘presione’. Also, avoid mixing English ‘link’ with Spanish grammar; keep it fully Spanish unless you’re targeting a very informal audience.