and their role is to indicatewho or what is performing an action.They change depending on who you’re talking to or about, and whether it’s a singular or plural. It’s important to know these little words as you will see them used frequently in the Spanish language!
The second row is called the second person ( tú and vosotros/vosotras), and anything lower on the chart is called the third person ( él, ella, usted, ellos, ellas, and ustedes).What does Estella Wego mean? Where does hasta luego come from? Translated literally from Spanish to English,...
@Ana90Louis le da un libro a ese gitano: why use “le”? Can I just say: Louis da un ...
→ ¿cuánto han cedido ellos?give and take you won't achieve an agreement without a bit of give and take→ no vais a conseguir un acuerdo sin hacer concesiones mutuasa bit of give and take→ un poco de toma y daca give away VT + ADV...
El Tiempo Condicional: “Would” Yo ía Keep the infinitive. Tú ías Él ía Nosotros íamos Ellos ían I would speak: hablaría I would travel: viajaría We would listen: escucharíamos You would go: irías They would study: estudiarían ...
Spitz quoted a diary entry of a Spanish Bishop who wrote in the year 1760, “En la Casa de Niños Expositos el niño se va poniendo triste y muchos de ellos mueren de tristeza” [In the Children’s Home, the child becomes sad and many of them die of sadness]. Spitz compared the...
Ser is more of a passive verb. While, estar is more of an active verb. They mean the same thing in English, but they are very different from one another.