Gracias, buenavida. Si te gustaría tener acceso a más vídeos y recibir ayuda personalizada, échale un ojo a La Comunidad deliberatespanish.com/comunidad 😊
Nacho - Thank you for these videos. They are very helpful. At my stage I have to slowly listen to the exercise a few words at a time, often refer to the transcript to make sure I got it right and then practice saying it from memory. Eventually I can say the entire exercise from memory. I then return the next day and listen to the exercise and then repeat it. This, al fin, leads to my question - It feels to me like I have memorized the exercise rather than learned to listen to it and then be able to repeat it from just what I heard. Am I on the right path??? I also work to be able to repeat two or three paragraphs from memory - which I can now do. I am proud to be a Patreon of your channel. You have helped me tremendously. I look forward to your counsel.
Vocabulario básico de subsistencia. 😁Gracias, Alex. Si te gustaría tener acceso a más vídeos y recibir ayuda personalizada, échale un ojo a La Suscripción deliberatespanish.com/comunidad 😊
These videos are very helpful. You do speak a little fast but I’ve found it easy to follow along with the cc on. I️ learn and understand better with the captions on. Keep up the good work! Thank you for your learning videos.
Great video as always! Why is it not "un grupo de turistas *americanos*"? I always thought it was "el turista" :-)Maybe just a typo in the subtitles, but hope you can be of help!
Listened to the video for the second time. Some sentences went perfectly and with some I still need some practice. The food words were rather difficult because I haven't really needed them. I'll try again probably tomorrow or after tomorrow to see how it goes then. Btw Why is it estaba buenísimo and not era buenísimo? I though it'd be with "ser" because I thought that it being good was part of its characteristics but it seems that it was about the plate being good at that moment.
NachoTime Spanish Gracias. Así que la factoría es como es pero la comida sale diferente cada vez (p.s. Dónde está la posición más natural de "cada vez"?)
@@DeliberateSpanishSomething I learned long ago was something like this: the lettuce is good [es buena] because it was fresh and crisp [characteristic]. The green salad is good [está buena] because the cook made it very well and it tastes good. Did I remember this right?
OK, I Iistened several times and I can never hear the "de" in the phrase "y de repente". All I hear is "y repente" or maybe "y erepente" but never "y de repente". I love your videos BTW, or should I say "por cierto me encantan tus videos".
Gracias, Rick 😊 My question to you is: how fast would I have to say "all of a sudden" for you to not hear "of a"? Often (in English and Spanish) it's not about actually hearing the sounds, but being able to fill in the gaps. The best way to do this is to become familiar with the sounds of the language, and this is a good exercise for it.
@@DeliberateSpanish Very good explanation. I labor to hear each word but now understand the process is being able to fill in the gaps. Thank you for addressing this.
These videos are absolutely superb.
Fantástico. 👍🏼
Thank you Nacho. Me encanta sus videos. Es muy util para me
awesome thanks me gusta mucho
Gracias, buenavida. Si te gustaría tener acceso a más vídeos y recibir ayuda personalizada, échale un ojo a La Comunidad deliberatespanish.com/comunidad 😊
Nacho - Thank you for these videos. They are very helpful. At my stage I have to slowly listen to the exercise a few words at a time, often refer to the transcript to make sure I got it right and then practice saying it from memory. Eventually I can say the entire exercise from memory. I then return the next day and listen to the exercise and then repeat it. This, al fin, leads to my question - It feels to me like I have memorized the exercise rather than learned to listen to it and then be able to repeat it from just what I heard. Am I on the right path???
I also work to be able to repeat two or three paragraphs from memory - which I can now do.
I am proud to be a Patreon of your channel. You have helped me tremendously.
I look forward to your counsel.
Buena pregunta, Tom. Te respondo via Patreon 😉
Este video tiene el vocabulario necesario para escapar el purgatorio, cosas que nunca conocia antes como queso rallado y rodajas
Vocabulario básico de subsistencia. 😁Gracias, Alex. Si te gustaría tener acceso a más vídeos y recibir ayuda personalizada, échale un ojo a La Suscripción deliberatespanish.com/comunidad 😊
Gracias Nacho! Me encantan tus videos!
Gracias a ti 😘
brilliant!! Thank you Nacho
Esto es muy util. Gracias.
Gracias a ti, Pies Felices 😁
Me encantan tus videos 😊😁
Muchisimas gracias. Un poco dificil para mi. Intentaré mañana
Estoy entusiasmada con tus videos! Los ejercicios son súper!
¡Dale duro! 😊
These videos are very helpful. You do speak a little fast but I’ve found it easy to follow along with the cc on. I️ learn and understand better with the captions on. Keep up the good work! Thank you for your learning videos.
Thanks 😊 Listening and reading at the same time is an excellent technique, so go for it!
Theo: No entendí por qué usaiste el tiempo 'preterit' en inglés, pero tradujiste usando el imperfecto. Gracias.
Awesome. As Always. Thank you so much!
¡De nada!
Great video as always! Why is it not "un grupo de turistas *americanos*"? I always thought it was "el turista" :-)Maybe just a typo in the subtitles, but hope you can be of help!
Bueno, es que en este caso eran mujeres. El turista y la turista. 😁
Ahh ya entiendo, muchas gracias! Y otra vez gracias por tus vídeos!
Listened to the video for the second time. Some sentences went perfectly and with some I still need some practice. The food words were rather difficult because I haven't really needed them. I'll try again probably tomorrow or after tomorrow to see how it goes then. Btw Why is it estaba buenísimo and not era buenísimo? I though it'd be with "ser" because I thought that it being good was part of its characteristics but it seems that it was about the plate being good at that moment.
Yeah, when describing how food tastes it's much more common to use «estar». The restaurant «es bueno», but the food «está buena».
Interesting.
NachoTime Spanish Gracias. Así que la factoría es como es pero la comida sale diferente cada vez (p.s. Dónde está la posición más natural de "cada vez"?)
@@DeliberateSpanishSomething I learned long ago was something like this: the lettuce is good [es buena] because it was fresh and crisp [characteristic]. The green salad is good [está buena] because the cook made it very well and it tastes good. Did I remember this right?
@@rsmrymcgwn That's right 👍
... en la prima frase
OK, I Iistened several times and I can never hear the "de" in the phrase "y de repente". All I hear is "y repente" or maybe "y erepente" but never "y de repente". I love your videos BTW, or should I say "por cierto me encantan tus videos".
Gracias, Rick 😊 My question to you is: how fast would I have to say "all of a sudden" for you to not hear "of a"? Often (in English and Spanish) it's not about actually hearing the sounds, but being able to fill in the gaps. The best way to do this is to become familiar with the sounds of the language, and this is a good exercise for it.
@@DeliberateSpanish Very good explanation. I labor to hear each word but now understand the process is being able to fill in the gaps. Thank you for addressing this.
Exacto. A veces serás capaz de llenar los huecos prestando más atención, pero otras simplemente tendrás que usar tus conocimientos de gramática 😁
Gracias como siempre por los videos. En este video, no podia oír "a última hora." Dije "a timadora" Jaja.
Mañana voy a mirar este video otra vez.
ver este vídeo 👍👍
gracias, necesito un red heart:)