Difficulty: Newbie
Spain
Idoia from El Aula Azul teaches us a useful grammatical structure for talking about our future plans.
Difficulty: Newbie
Spain
Let's learn yet another way to talk about possession from the teachers at El Aula Azul.
Difficulty: Newbie
Spain
How do we talk about possession, or the things we have, in Spanish? Let's find out with Ester from El Aula Azul.
Difficulty: Newbie
Spain
Let's practice how to speak in Spanish about actions that we're doing right now, in this moment, with Ester from El Aula Azul.
Difficulty: Newbie
Spain
Using several habitual actions that many Spanish people do, Idoia from El Aula Azul teaches us to conjugate -ar, -er, and -ir verbs in the present indicative.
Difficulty: Newbie
Colombia
Let's learn how to strike up a conversation with someone in Spanish with both the formal and informal styles of address.
Difficulty: Newbie
Colombia
Cleer and Lida meet at the lake to do some exercise with an inflatable board. But first, they'll need to inflate it! Let's count with them to one hundred while they do it.
Difficulty: Newbie
Ecuador
In this video, we learn how to say the names of the most commonly-used colors in Spanish.
Difficulty: Newbie
Latin American Neutral Spanish
The letter "r" in Spanish can be tricky, particularly since it can be pronounced differently depending upon its position in the word and also has a separate "double r" [rr] letter with its own pronunciation. You can study live online with Marina, Sol and other excellent teachers any time at GoSpanish.Com. 5 day free trial, no credit card necessary.
Difficulty: Newbie
Latin American Neutral Spanish
Marina offers to help Sol with her lesson on telling time. Tarde can be translated as either "afternoon" or "evening," depending upon the hour. Tarde encompasses a longer period of time from many English speakers' notions of "afternoon" or "evening." Note that "Buenas noches" [literally "Good night"] may be used when many English speakers might use "Good evening" to greet someone at a later hour, whereas "Good night" in English tends to be used mainly at bedtime or to say goodbye. GoSpanish.Com
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