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.
Difficulty: Beginner
Spain
Raquel and Marisa show us what kind of Spanish dialogue might take place at a tourism office when one has recently arrived to a new city.
Difficulty: Beginner
Spain
Raquel and Marisa teach us about the types of announcements we might hear over the loudspeaker at an airport in a Spanish-speaking country.
Difficulty: Beginner
Spain
Raquel teaches us some Spanish phrases that might come in handy at a music festival.
Difficulty: Beginner
Spain
In today's episode, we learn how to talk about directions in Spanish.
Difficulty: Beginner
Spain
Raquel teaches us how to rent public bicycles.
Difficulty: Beginner
Spain
Learn how to open a bank account in Spanish with Raquel.
Difficulty: Beginner
Spain
Raquel explains to us how to file a police report in the case that belongings are stolen from you while in a foreign country.
Difficulty: Beginner
Spain
After losing her backpack, Raquel tells us about her experience with the train's Lost and Found.
Difficulty: Beginner
Spain
Raquel gives us some tips for smart shopping.
Difficulty: Beginner
Guatemala
Marriage and children bring with them needs and responsiblities that a soltero doesn’t have. Rafael hopes to grow his small pharmacy into a cadena of drug stores that he can use to benefit his wife and kids. To raise the necessary capital, Rafael is working abroad for a few years.
Difficulty: Beginner
Guatemala
Wicoy: como una calabaza pequeña, tal vez 15 cm de diametro, verde y blanco y es mucho mas fino que la calabaza. Para comer es parecido a un zucchetthi/zucchini. Bastante rico. (Thank you to Guatesol for info!) Rafael relates facts and myths of the natural environment in his native land.
Difficulty: Beginner
Guatemala
Our friend, Rafael, returns this week to talk to us about his homeland and its culture. As he explains, the Mayan culture continues to thrive in Guatemala via its language, clothing, and customs.
Difficulty: Beginner
Guatemala
In Guatemala, people of Mayan descent not only retain various native forms of dress, but they also speak dialects of the Mayan language, a language many people wrongly presume to be long lost to history. Rafael treats us to some examples of words and phrases in this language, and also explains some of the particulars of traditional dress.
Difficulty: Beginner
Ecuador
From Quito, Ecuador, Julia invites us into her home to share a delicious breakfast including cheese toast, fruit, tomato juice, and delicious mountain grown coffee.
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