Spanish Phrase
Introduce la contraseña del Wi‑Fi para conectarte.
Meaning
This sentence tells someone to type or enter the Wi‑Fi password so that they can get online. It is a direct, polite instruction often used in public places or when helping a guest.
When to use
Use this phrase when you are guiding a friend, a client, or a visitor on how to join a wireless network – for example in a café, hotel lobby, office reception, or at a friend's house.
✦Grammar Breakdown
IntroducelacontraseñadelWi‑Fiparaconectarte
Imperative of introducir
‘Introduce’ is the tú‑imperative form of the verb ‘introducir’, used to give a direct command.
Definite article + noun
‘la contraseña’ is a feminine singular noun phrase meaning ‘the password’.
Contraction del = de + el
‘del’ combines the preposition ‘de’ (of) with the masculine article ‘el’, forming ‘of the’.
Loanword Wi‑Fi
‘Wi‑Fi’ is an English loanword; it stays unchanged in Spanish and is treated as masculine.
Purpose clause para + infinitive
‘para conectarte’ expresses purpose: ‘in order to connect yourself’.
Reflexive infinitive
‘conectarte’ is the infinitive of the pronominal verb ‘conectarse’, agreeing with the implied ‘tú’.
🗨In Conversation
¿Cómo me conecto al Wi‑Fi?
How do I connect to the Wi‑Fi?
Introduce la contraseña del Wi‑Fi para conectarte.
Enter the Wi‑Fi password to connect.
✕Common Mistakes
Introduce la contraseña del Wi‑Fi para conectarse.
When speaking directly to someone (tú), the reflexive pronoun must match the subject: ‘conectarte’, not ‘conectarse’. ‘Conectarse’ would be third‑person or impersonal.
Introduce la contraseña del wifi para conectarte.
The brand name is written ‘Wi‑Fi’ with capital letters and a hyphen; using ‘wifi’ is a common typo.
Introduce la contraseña del Wi‑Fi para conectarte a internet.
Adding ‘a internet’ is redundant; the purpose is already clear with ‘para conectarte’.
↔Alternatives
Escribe la clave del Wi‑Fi para conectarte.
Write the Wi‑Fi key to connect.
Pon la contraseña del Wi‑Fi y conéctate.
Put the Wi‑Fi password and connect.
Ingresa la clave del Wi‑Fi para acceder.
Enter the Wi‑Fi key to access.
Cultural Tip
In many Spanish‑speaking countries ‘contraseña’ and ‘clave’ are both used for ‘password’; ‘clave’ sounds a bit more informal. The verb ‘introducir’ is perfectly correct but many speakers prefer ‘escribir’ or ‘poner’ in everyday conversation. Remember that ‘Wi‑Fi’ is masculine, so you’ll hear ‘el Wi‑Fi’ and ‘el router’. Adjust the level of formality according to your audience – use the tú‑imperative for friends or informal settings, and the usted‑imperative (Introduzca…) for formal contexts.

