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5,638 questions • 9,008 answers • 875,509 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert Spanish teachers
5,638 questions • 9,008 answers • 875,509 learners
Hola Inma,
Please could you advise me?
When speaking casually as in the conversation here, is it generally more common to use 'estar' than 'sentir' regarding 'to feel'?
Gracias :)
Wouldn't that sentence better translate to "Maria eats little bread."?
And "Maria doesn't eat much bread." better translate to "María no come mucho pan."?
¿Tiene un bolígrafo?Do you have a pen? (formal you)
From the sentence, I think it means he/she has a pen. Why would it become do you have a pen?
Ella esta enfermo porque, ella quiere trabajar en en hospital grande, ella no le gusta trabajar en el clinic porque el clinic es muy pequeno.
Is there some consistency I am missing in endings in -ar, -er, and -ir verbs in el imperativo? Ex's: Levántate (-ar), siéntese (-ir), córtense (-ar), levantémonos (-ar), acuéstate (ar). Something to do with reflexive?
Sorry, i understand that hacia is sort of correct, only the accent is missing.
This is really a question about one of the quiz questions:
I correctly chose the response “por más que lo intento” ________, no consigo recordar todo el vocabulario.
But would it have been grammatically incorrect to say “por más que intento, no consigo...” ?
In the test question "My grandmother has gray hair" why do you use tiene instead of the familiar form "tienes". You are referring to YOUR grandmother. Wouldn't that be familiar?
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