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Exercise: My name is Danny (male version)
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Studylist for exercise My name is Danny (male version)
Studylist for exercise My name is Danny (male version)
A list of the topics covered in this exercise.
Spanish grammar
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Using vivo en + [city/country/region] to say where you live in Spanish
Using me llamo [name] - to say your name in Spanish
Ser vs Estar in Spanish: Using estar in Spanish (not ser) when talking about locations
Conjugate ser in the present tense in Spanish (El Presente)
Using gustar in Spanish + verb to say like [doing something]
Al and Del in Spanish
Saying your age in Spanish: Tener [número] años = To be [number] years old
Using los or las to say "the" in Spanish (plural definite articles)
Using un, una to say a/an in Spanish (singular indefinite articles)
Conjugate regular -ir verbs in the present tense in Spanish (El Presente)
Conjugate estar in the present tense in Spanish (El Presente)
Conjugate tener in the present tense in Spanish (El Presente)
Conjugate regular -ar verbs in the present tense in Spanish (El Presente)
Conjugate preferir in the present tense in Spanish (El Presente)
Conjugate jugar in the present tense in Spanish (El Presente)
Possessive adjectives in Spanish: my, your, his, her, its, our and their (Adjetivos posesivos)
Forming the singular masculine and feminine of regular adjectives in Spanish
Gender of Spanish nouns ending in -umbre, -ión, -dad, -tad, -itis and -sis and their plural
Ser vs Estar in Spanish: Using ser in Spanish (not estar) to say what you do for a living
Using demasiado, bastante, un poco, mucho, tan, tanto and muy for too, quite, a bit, so, so much and very in Spanish (quantitative adverbs)
Forming regular masculine and feminine nouns in Spanish (singular and plural)
Quantitative adjective in Spanish: cada and todos/-as for "every" in time phrases (Adjetivo cuantitativo)
Using numbers with nouns in Spanish
Gender and plural of nouns ending in -e in Spanish
Gender and plural of Spanish nouns ending in -ma (Greek origin)
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