Difficulty: Beginner
Spain
This lesson teaches us how to introduce ourselves and others and say where we are from.
Difficulty: Beginner
Spain
Raquel gives us some tips for smart shopping.
Difficulty: Beginner
Venezuela
Having noticed a lot of confusion among her students regarding the usage and meaning of reflexive verbs and pronouns, Venezuelan Spanish teacher, Carolina Graterol, clarifies these topics with some useful examples.
Difficulty: Beginner
Mexico, Spain
Karla and Isabel provide us with clues about some popular musical instruments so that we might guess which ones they are describing.
Difficulty: Beginner
Venezuela
Carolina teaches us the difference between the Spanish verbs "saber" and "conocer" [to know], which are similar but not interchangeable and used in different contexts.
Difficulty: Beginner
Venezuela
Carolina teaches about the apocopation, or shortening, of a small group of masculine singular adjectives in Spanish.
Difficulty: Beginner
Spain
Raquel teaches us some Spanish phrases that might come in handy at a music festival.
Difficulty: Beginner
Spain
Clara continues telling us about how to talk about the weather in Spanish with examples of sentences that might be used when it's snowy, foggy, windy, sunny or rainy.
Difficulty: Beginner
Venezuela
Carolina, a Venezuelan Spanish teacher, teaches us the difference between the Spanish verbs, "mirar" (to look at/watch), "ver" (to see) and "buscar" (to look for) and gives us examples of sentences in which they might be found.
Difficulty: Beginner
Spain
Clara explains a bit about the weather in Spain and how we might speak about it during different seasons and/or weather conditions.
Difficulty: Beginner
Spain
After losing her backpack, Raquel tells us about her experience with the train's Lost and Found.
Difficulty: Beginner
Mexico, Spain
Karla and Isabel tell us about the many activities they enjoy doing in their spare time.
Difficulty: Beginner
Spain
Clara tells us the names of many of the parts of the human body in Spanish and uses some of them in sentences.
Difficulty: Beginner
Spain
Comparative forms in Spanish are constructions that compare two or more objects or people's similarity or difference. This episode of "Karla e Isabel" focuses on comparatives of equality and inferiority.
Difficulty: Beginner
Spain
Raquel and Marisa explain augmentatives and diminutives in Spanish, which are suffixes that are added to words to alter their meanings, including to indicate greater or lesser size and/or importance or as expressions of affection.
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