Esta fue una excelente presentación. Ahora el subjuntivo es más claro. Empecé a aprender español con tu curso hace dos meses y me sorprende cuánto español puedo hablar. Estoy muy feliz. (This was written only using what I learned from you course. I couldn't say more than 5 words in Spanish two month ago.)
Since english is an awkward language and I did understand your comment I want to make a correction. Namely that the word digestable needs some more words in order to be correct - lile; and making them digestible. Sorry, I just want to help. And my spanish needs a lot of work so I love these Pro Spanish lessons too.
!No pares de hacer estos vídeos tan buenos, por favor!😁 Son muy útiles e informativos. Por eso, escucho este vídeo de nuevo. Quiero que hagas muchos más. (Just practising what I have learnt.🎯) Gracias por simplificar estos usos del presente subjuntivo.👍 Voy a practicar estas dos frases por si acaso tengo una discusión con alguien 🤣: ¡NO TE VAYAS ASÍ! = Don't leave like this! ¡QUIERO QUE TE VAYAS! = I want you to leave!
Thanks for the lesson. I am a little confused as to why most of the examples are subjunctive and not imperative as they seemed like commands. I understand the 'quiero que' being subjunctive as it seems more like a desire. What am I missing? Many thanks.
@@LearnSpanishLearnSpanish I had the same remark. Wouldn't that be confusing with the real form of the subjunctive? As far as I know, Spanish also uses the same expression as English and French when we describe the "negative imperative". I would just use the "negative imperative tense" expression instead of "the subjunctive" to avoid any confusion for the new learners. Thanks very much for your great lesson!! Very much appreciated! Cheers,
Subjunctive is getting easier for me due to your help! "Sonrié' is used very close to the beginning of the children's show Pero y Gato episode "Juntos" on HBO latino. The dog points the camera at the cat and says one word "Sonrié" which is translated as simply "smile". Easy for a child to learn a word conjugated in subjunctive tense. Harder for those of us who think we are becoming more advanced too understand. Again it will be easier for complete beginners if you were to just introduce words in the subjunctive tense without contrasting them with the present tense at first. So for example just introduce how to say don't do something with out too much explanation and later add in how to say "I don't" and "you don't" prefacing your remark with "some of you more advanced subscribers might already know that...." Good luck and keep up the great work with subjunctive tense!
muchas gracias por todo tu esfuerzo....te agradezco mucho....tus explicaciones son muy claras y como mi idioma nativo es ingles, puedo relacionar muy bien..cheers!
So can you clarify for me... only use the subjunctive for "don't" when it is being said as a negative instruction/command "don't run" (no corras) as different from a question "don't you want to go home?" (no quieres ir a tu casa?) or when you are making a statement eg "I don't speak spanish" (no hablo espanol)?......
A good lesson, however a little confused. When do you use the imperative, ie command, v the subjunctive, as they appear the same to me, and I’m trying to understand the difference, ie, no hables, is same in subjunctive and imperative ????? What am I missing?????
Assuming you are using tú (familiar) and not usted: "¡Habla español!" = Speak Spanish! (no subjunctive, imperative is mostly just the he/she version of the verb) ; "¡No hables español!" = DONT speak Spanish! (negative command, therefore subjunctive).
It's confusing because the video isn't about using the "subjunctive", it's about using the "imperative". Both the negative imperative and the (present) subjunctive use the same conjugations, but the construction of the phrases and the inherent meanings are quite different. They are essentially opposite in nature. The positive imperative uses the same conjugations as the subjunctive except for the "tú" commands. If you are learning the subjunctive mood, I can recommend an excellent handbook.
Just a mere comment...if u don't mind.... there r no pronoun's at all! I don't want him to do it,or whatever might be:no quiero que el salga,or yo no quiero que ella venga!!!ty
Sorry, typo at 4:25, shouldn't be an accent on compres.
Esta fue una excelente presentación. Ahora el subjuntivo es más claro. Empecé a aprender español con tu curso hace dos meses y me sorprende cuánto español puedo hablar.
Estoy muy feliz. (This was written only using what I learned from you course. I couldn't say more than 5 words in Spanish two month ago.)
¡Impresionante! Has aprendido mucho en dos meses. Debes estar muy orgulloso con lo que has conseguido. Gracias por tu comentario, eres muy amable.
Very impressive, muy impresionante
¡No quiero que pares de hacer estos vídeos excelentes! Gracias por ayudarme repasar el subjuntivo.👍
Your are exceptionally talented in delineating tough thing's to digestable..
Since english is an awkward language and I did understand your comment I want to make a correction. Namely that the word digestable needs some more words in order to be correct - lile; and making them digestible. Sorry, I just want to help. And my spanish needs a lot of work so I love these Pro Spanish lessons too.
FAB! Love how you taught subjunctive at the same time.
Gracias por el brillante vídeo. Estoy aprendiendo mucho.
Great job, I understand negative commands for the first time. Easy.
I am enjoying the lessons very explicit and clear to understand
Después Yo empecé a aprender español con tu videos yo mucho mejorado que hablar ahora. Gracias muchas maestro.
Muchas gracias ❤😂,l really enjoyed this lesson
Thank you very much for another fantastic lesson.🙏👌🏼👍🏼You're an amazing teacher. 👏👏👏
!No pares de hacer estos vídeos tan buenos, por favor!😁 Son muy útiles e informativos. Por eso, escucho este vídeo de nuevo. Quiero que hagas muchos más. (Just practising what I have learnt.🎯) Gracias por simplificar estos usos del presente subjuntivo.👍
Voy a practicar estas dos frases por si acaso tengo una discusión con alguien 🤣:
¡NO TE VAYAS ASÍ!
= Don't leave like this!
¡QUIERO QUE TE VAYAS!
= I want you to leave!
Thanks for the lesson. I am a little confused as to why most of the examples are subjunctive and not imperative as they seemed like commands. I understand the 'quiero que' being subjunctive as it seems more like a desire. What am I missing? Many thanks.
It's just that a Negative Command is always the subjunctive. An Imperative is 'DO THIS', not 'don't do this'.
@@LearnSpanishLearnSpanish Ahhhhh!! Thanks so much! 😃
@@LearnSpanishLearnSpanish I had the same remark. Wouldn't that be confusing with the real form of the subjunctive? As far as I know, Spanish also uses the same expression as English and French when we describe the "negative imperative". I would just use the "negative imperative tense" expression instead of "the subjunctive" to avoid any confusion for the new learners. Thanks very much for your great lesson!! Very much appreciated! Cheers,
Great information and you've made it a lot easier to remember, thanks :)
SUPER helpful, thanks so much 🙌
Subjunctive is getting easier for me due to your help! "Sonrié' is used very close to the beginning of the children's show Pero y Gato episode "Juntos" on HBO latino. The dog points the camera at the cat and says one word "Sonrié" which is translated as simply "smile". Easy for a child to learn a word conjugated in subjunctive tense. Harder for those of us who think we are becoming more advanced too understand.
Again it will be easier for complete beginners if you were to just introduce words in the subjunctive tense without contrasting them with the present tense at first.
So for example just introduce how to say don't do something with out too much explanation and later add in how to say "I don't" and "you don't" prefacing your remark with "some of you more advanced subscribers might already know that...."
Good luck and keep up the great work with subjunctive tense!
I agree. The way we're taught is unnatural and requires going back over and rethinking.
muchas gracias por todo tu esfuerzo....te agradezco mucho....tus explicaciones son muy claras y como mi idioma nativo es ingles, puedo relacionar muy bien..cheers!
excellent presentatin for learning,, Thank you for helping us learn espanol
Best teacher!,
I like your lessons so much thank you so very much🇬🇺
That was a great lesson! Thanks!
You are a genius... You makes my life so easier to learn Spanish.. Now I can speak fluently because of you....
Are you sure
Thank you so much , but I got a question why you used hablas instead of hablo & later you used vengo , salgo and so on. could someone pls explain me .
🎉what a great lesson, keep it up
Thank a lot 🇮🇳❤️ wow great job
Wow, amazing. I've been having trouble with subjunctives for forever and you made so simple. Amazing
Great lesson!
A golden tutorial
I was looking for it
Excellent explanation!
¡Gracias por hacer el video!
this channel is so helpful! muchas gracias ☺️
Another brilliant lesson thanks profe !
Es bueno leciones,muchas gracias
Whats different from the videos on here compared to the ones you pay for on the website?
The paid course is step by step building up, where as these are stand alone supplementary videos.
This is incredibly a helpful lesson !
Gracias por el video senor !!
Quiero esta lección
It is !No corras rapido!
Wow! You are amazing!! Thanks fo this!
So can you clarify for me... only use the subjunctive for "don't" when it is being said as a negative instruction/command "don't run" (no corras) as different from a question "don't you want to go home?" (no quieres ir a tu casa?) or when you are making a statement eg "I don't speak spanish" (no hablo espanol)?......
Yes, that's right! You can check because the phrase won't have the word you in it, e.g. "Don't go out"
@@LearnSpanishLearnSpanish great, thanks
A good lesson, however a little confused. When do you use the imperative, ie command, v the subjunctive, as they appear the same to me, and I’m trying to understand the difference, ie, no hables, is same in subjunctive and imperative ????? What am I missing?????
Assuming you are using tú (familiar) and not usted: "¡Habla español!" = Speak Spanish! (no subjunctive, imperative is mostly just the he/she version of the verb) ; "¡No hables español!" = DONT speak Spanish! (negative command, therefore subjunctive).
@@LearnSpanishLearnSpanish - gracias, esa ayudar explicar
It's confusing because the video isn't about using the "subjunctive", it's about using the "imperative". Both the negative imperative and the (present) subjunctive use the same conjugations, but the construction of the phrases and the inherent meanings are quite different. They are essentially opposite in nature. The positive imperative uses the same conjugations as the subjunctive except for the "tú" commands. If you are learning the subjunctive mood, I can recommend an excellent handbook.
Hola!
Isnt it ‘you go’ is ‘vas’ therefore dont go -> no vas
I dont understand why we use ‘vayas’
'no vas' = you don't go, which isn't the same as 'DONT GO. For that negative command you need the subjunctive form, vayas.
Can you help me understand why “te” is included in “quiero que te vayas”, but not in “quiero que te hables”?
the first one is reflective, the second one isn't. the second one would literally mean, I want that you speak to yourself. or something like that
@@titusboudreaux you're right
I learn so much fro this
This seems to be more advanced than a beginner course?
The course description says up to conversational level.
Thank u so much , PS : the thankies are from Morocco.
Ay, ay , ay, ay, canta y no llores...
The hardest part about the subjunctive is WHEN to use it.
TOP!
Saves que yolina estaba con El
Roger that!
Who came up with this? I want to speak with the person responsible for this language:)
Just a mere comment...if u don't mind.... there r no pronoun's at all! I don't want him to do it,or whatever might be:no quiero que el salga,or yo no quiero que ella venga!!!ty
Best teacher!,
Excellent lesson!