Gracias, good lesson! I was learning about the preterite tense and came across these accents. That's why I wanted to know how to pronounce this properly.
That's fantastic! ¡Qué bueno! We have a whole course on Spanish pronunciation from both Latin America and Spain, you can access to it in our membership if you're interested.
¡Muchas gracias Jenny! Are you in our Spanish Facebook group? We have a ton of Spanish lessons and resources there. You can access free here: facebook.com/groups/HolaSpanishCommunity/
Muy bien. Is their a difference between saying tú and tu (you and your)? The same for qué and que? I think qué implies a question and que does not, but clear how they are different. Would love to know this. Muchas Gracias.
¡Gracias por tu comentario! here is a video lesson where we explain the difference between tú and tu: ua-cam.com/video/mkujTZazLk8/v-deo.html but yes, essentially one is the personal pronoun (you) and the other the possessive adjective (your) as you said. 'Qué' is used in direct and indirect questions and exclamations and it means 'what' (¿Qué día es hoy? What day it is today? - ¡Qué bien! Great! - No sé qué quiere. I don't know what he/she wants) and 'que' is a conjunction and it means that or which/who (el problema es que no se qué quiere. The problem is that I don't know what he/she wants - La casa en la que crecí. The house in which I grew up - El doctor que me prescribió la medicación. The doctor who prescribed the medication). I hope it helps :)
This is a very difficult challenge when you write, even for native speakers. To recognize where the 'written accent' goes and how to pronounce those "special words", takes too much attention. If you are able to recognize and see the difference between a "simple word" and a "special word", then I applaud to you because it is a huge challenge as I told before.
There is a word for the second-to-the last. It's penultimate. It often is confused to mean something beyond ultimate--but that would be modifying a superlative and we don't do that. It literally means second-to-the-last. We need to bring it back.
@@HolaSpanish Hola Brenda la problema es mi pronunciación la palabra depósito donde trabajo por mi opinión oído exactamente con depositó la plata en el banco,la diferencia es muy poquito.
Don't try to learn a language from a book, you are never going to learn it. You will, forever, live in theory. I you had to learn how to walk from a book, also, you would still be crawling...
Hay muchas formas de mejorar y avanzar en el aprendizaje de una lengua. En mi opinion es un proceso y todo lo que hagas te puede ayudar a alcanzar tu objetivo. No hay una sola cosa que te lleve al éxito, ni una píldora mágica. Creo que es la combinación de estrategias, técnicas, estudio, tiempo y dedicación lo que te ayudará a hablar español fluido.
Esta niña siempre está feliz.
Si, muchas gracias por venir ¡Un abrazo! ❤️
Thanks! i have spanish-presentation on monday at my norwegian school, and this video helped me SO much! thanks!
¡Fantástico! Muchas suerte con la presentación ♥
gracias! I'm a camp counselor and I have a camper who only speaks Spanish. This is super helpful, thank you!
¡Fabuloso!
Esta lección fut muy interesante. Gracias profesora Brenda. Vamos a la próximo leccion. 😊
This is great l will always love seeing you and learning pronouns sing and studying Spanish with you .
¡Muchas gracias! Sigue adelante 💟
¡Excelente clase! ¡Me encantó! Un ejemplo podría ser: canto (signing or I sign) vs cantó (she/he/it sang)
Con el debido respeto. Sing=cantar Sign=firmar Saludos
Gracias, good lesson! I was learning about the preterite tense and came across these accents. That's why I wanted to know how to pronounce this properly.
That's fantastic! ¡Qué bueno! We have a whole course on Spanish pronunciation from both Latin America and Spain, you can access to it in our membership if you're interested.
That was a very nice video, thank you. I really want to speak Spanish properly and I feel this will really help.
¡Muchas gracias Jenny! Are you in our Spanish Facebook group? We have a ton of Spanish lessons and resources there. You can access free here: facebook.com/groups/HolaSpanishCommunity/
Thank so very much, by the way I’m learning both languages at the same time. Pero me gusta más el español.
¡Fantástico! 👏👏👏 me alegra que puedas practicar un poco de los dos
Paso a menudo por aquí porque eres una buena maestra.
¡Muychas gracias!
Thanks! Exactly what I needed :)
¡Fabuloso!
Can you start a series about accents in español? I really enjoyed this video a lot.
Muchas gracias por la sugerencia. Espero hacerlo pronto ;D Un abrazo ;)
muchas gracias!
¡Gracias a ti! 😊
Super helpful.
¡Genial! 💝
very good !
Muy bien. Is their a difference between saying tú and tu (you and your)? The same for qué and que? I think qué implies a question and que does not, but clear how they are different. Would love to know this. Muchas Gracias.
¡Gracias por tu comentario! here is a video lesson where we explain the difference between tú and tu: ua-cam.com/video/mkujTZazLk8/v-deo.html but yes, essentially one is the personal pronoun (you) and the other the possessive adjective (your) as you said. 'Qué' is used in direct and indirect questions and exclamations and it means 'what' (¿Qué día es hoy? What day it is today? - ¡Qué bien! Great! - No sé qué quiere. I don't know what he/she wants) and 'que' is a conjunction and it means that or which/who (el problema es que no se qué quiere. The problem is that I don't know what he/she wants - La casa en la que crecí. The house in which I grew up - El doctor que me prescribió la medicación. The doctor who prescribed the medication). I hope it helps :)
This is a very difficult challenge when you write, even for native speakers. To recognize where the 'written accent' goes and how to pronounce those "special words", takes too much attention. If you are able to recognize and see the difference between a "simple word" and a "special word", then I applaud to you because it is a huge challenge as I told before.
There is a word for the second-to-the last. It's penultimate. It often is confused to mean something beyond ultimate--but that would be modifying a superlative and we don't do that. It literally means second-to-the-last. We need to bring it back.
Tq very much❣️
Gracias :)
Can you do the future tense cause that mixes me up
Would it be right or wrong to put an accent over the I in Isla as such - ÍSLA
No sería correcto.
Please help send me your Link for consistency follow up . Thanks you very much.
mucho guapa ! gracias profesora......
¡Muchas gracias por ver la clase! ♥
❤❤❤❤
💟
👍👍👍👍👍
I thought the tilde is ~ and accent is ‘ ?
curioso yo ando queriendo aprender ingles y veo clases para el español
Tengo problemas con depósito y depositó
Hola, Scott, ¿Cuál es la pregunta? depósito puede significar varias cosas dependiendo del contexto y depositó es el verbo en pretérito de depositar.
@@HolaSpanish Hola Brenda la problema es mi pronunciación la palabra depósito donde trabajo por mi opinión oído exactamente con depositó la plata en el banco,la diferencia es muy poquito.
32
este esté - esta está - aun aún - sé se
No mames se paso de verga nunca había visto un tutorial de como pronunciar acentos Del español XD
Don't try to learn a language from a book, you are never going to learn it. You will, forever, live in theory. I you had to learn how to walk from a book, also, you would still be crawling...
Hay muchas formas de mejorar y avanzar en el aprendizaje de una lengua. En mi opinion es un proceso y todo lo que hagas te puede ayudar a alcanzar tu objetivo. No hay una sola cosa que te lleve al éxito, ni una píldora mágica. Creo que es la combinación de estrategias, técnicas, estudio, tiempo y dedicación lo que te ayudará a hablar español fluido.