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5,578 questions • 8,909 answers • 862,966 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert Spanish teachers
5,578 questions • 8,909 answers • 862,966 learners
The notebook information appears to be very poorly delineated on this subject. The answers in the micro-quiz seem to fly directly in the face of the BUT BE CAREFUL information given! If the person is selecting SOME of the ORANGES, according to the text the "some" should be alguna since "even if it refers to a plural noun, the pronoun is in the singular form." The lesson dictates appears to need a lot of work.
This word list is empty.
I'm confused why the answer for #10 is cierto when the translation is "some/a bit" and not "certain."
Hello,
In reading one of your lessons on Prepositions, I saw "fiarse de" i.e: fiarse de algo, Roberto, etc.
I was surprised that "de" is used here and not "a" for a person, or "en".
1) Could you help me understand why "de" is used here?
and:
2) Can these forms be used and if so, what would they mean? and if not, why not?
fiarse en algo
fiarse a algo
Thank you,
Nicole
Both hubo and habia mean there was or there were. What is the difference?
You have this sentence in the lesson:
Their endings are the same as other regular -er verbs in El Presente de Subjuntivo.
I think this should be changed to say -ar verbs.
English text had an issue: "explaining it's working"?? - not correct. You would say perhaps, "explaining how the gym worked, or functioned (in general - thus the rules of the gym, or how to use the gym), or explaining how a particular machine worked.
Hola!
Quiero saber si los personas mexicano dicen "j" para "ll" y "y" o es un "y" sonido? Vivo en California y quiero sonar mas natural para mi comunidad. Gracias por todo!
(Sorry if my Spanish is broken, I just restarted learning)
I was taught podrías means could when talking about the future and podía means could when talking about the past. Is this wrong?
Why does Mexico DF mean Mexico City ?
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