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5,496 questions • 8,742 answers • 847,443 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert Spanish teachers
5,496 questions • 8,742 answers • 847,443 learners
Are “que” and “quien” mostly interchangeable as relative pronouns when talking about a person? Or is there a subtlety that I’m missing? I always feel a little unsure when I use “quien” because it seems like Spanish speakers use “que” more often.
Hello,
I did a search to find a lesson to learn these terms, but could not find any. I did see the word "lejos" in a list in the directions lesson, but nothing else.
Could you tell me 1) how to look for lessons (will just doing a search find these?) and what lesson you have that would encompass this. Thank you. Nicole
I am confused with fui and estuve. Fui is simple past but estuve is past also??
Hello, like many people I struggle between choosing the imperfect or indefinido tense.
In this exercise, the sentence below was correct,
"pero ayer el guiso de mamá tenía carne,"
Please would you help me understand why the imperfect tense is correct, I had understood that the use of a time clause "ayer" would have made it indefinido.
Thanks
When and how is "habian" used?
¡Hola!
Let's have a look at the following sentences:
1) Mis padres querían que estudiara Derecho
2) Susana quería que le hubiera traído fresas, pero no pude
Could you tell me if Pluscuamperfecto de subjuntivo is used in the second sentence to emphasize that somebody didn't manage to bring strawberries, however the result of the first one is unknown?
Regards,
Alexander
Considering estar can be used in the preterite and imperfect with the present participle ( gerund ), are they used in different ways? Or do they mean the same thing? For example, do:
"Estuve corriendo" and "estaba corriendo" mean the same thing? I was running. Is one used more than the other for any reason?
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