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
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
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 learn yet another way to talk about possession from the teachers at El Aula Azul.
Difficulty:
Newbie
Spain
Idoia from El Aula Azul teaches us a useful grammatical structure for talking about our future plans.
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:
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
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
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
Colombia
Carlos and Xavi, Carlos' Spanish friend, invite us to observe the difference in pronunciation between the Spanish from Spain and Latin American Spanish, particularly as regards the letters "c" and "z."
Difficulty:
Beginner
Colombia
With several examples, Carlos and Xavi continue to demonstrate to us the difference in pronunciation of the letters "c" and "z" in Colombia and Spain.
Difficulty:
Beginner
Colombia
While in Colombia, the second person plural pronoun, "ustedes," is typically used to address more than one person as "you," both formally and informally, in Spain, "vosotros" is much more commonly used on an informal basis. Carlos and Xavi provide us with several examples of how the same idea would be expressed using either "ustedes" or "vosotros."
Difficulty:
Beginner
Colombia
Carlos and Xavi point out to us a number of cases in which different words are utilized for the very same object or concept in Spain versus Colombia.
Difficulty:
Beginner
Argentina, Colombia
Rather than using the second person informal pronoun "tú," the "voseo," or use of the word "vos," is more commonly employed in Argentina and other countries to address someone as "you." Through examples, Carlos and Cyndy demonstrate how the same ideas would be expressed using each of these pronouns.
Difficulty:
Beginner
Argentina, Colombia
Carlos and Cyndy chat about the different names used for some of the same objects in their respective countries, Colombia and Argentina.
Are you sure you want to delete this comment? You will not be able to recover it.