Difficulty: Newbie
Colombia
This time, Carlos focuses on the personal pronouns in Spanish, which are used to refer to people in sentences. Let's explore, among other things, which personal pronouns are singular vs. plural, which ones are masculine vs. feminine, and which ones are particular to certain regions.
Difficulty: Newbie
Spain
Let's continue our guessing games with more colors!
Difficulty: Newbie
Ecuador
What is the difference between "tú" and "vos" if both pronouns are used to informally address someone as "you" in Spanish? In this video, Luana explains to us how both forms are conjugated and pronounced as well as where they are used.
Difficulty: Newbie
Ecuador
Luana tells us the Spanish names for the most immediate members of one's family.
Difficulty: Newbie
Spain
Guess the colors of the things Idoia and Ester from El Aula Azul are describing, and learn some vocabulary in the process!
Difficulty: Newbie
Colombia
Upon arrival to a new city, you might need some help finding certain places. In this video, Cleer and Lida will show us how to ask pertinent questions and start a conversation with somebody in this context.
Difficulty: Newbie
Ecuador
Ana Carolina and her son Elías José will teach us how to ask some simple questions in order to strike up a conversation in Spanish.
Difficulty: Newbie
Spain
Idoia, our teacher at El Aula Azul, teaches us several important Spanish terms to talk about different points in the future, enabling us to effectively talk about our upcoming plans.
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.
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