Visit our Spring Spanish Academy website: go.springlanguages.com/free-spanish-training-06e44 and sign up for a free Spanish training and free sample Spanish lessons. 🤩
And there are the not-so-perfect "cognados", that you will probably know too also. Words like..... 1. La bomba (bomb) 2. el carro (car) 3. el paso (pass; step) 4. tranquillo (-a) (tranquil) 5. el combate (combat, fight) 6. el choque (shock)
I must note that at least a few cognates in English and Spanish are spelled exactly the same but pronounced differently. That’s because the English language eventually underwent The Great Vowel Shift (which was what turned “ah, ay, ee, oh, oo” into “ay, ee, eye, oh, yoo” for Modern English).
So "error" - pronounced in English - is "EH-ruhr". But "error" in Spanish is much different. Because of the double r, or "erre", the trilled R needs to be very strong, so it is pronounced like this---"eh-RRROHR." Simplemente asi.
You almost got it the first time!!! 🥳🥳🥳 This is how you should say it: "'No' es un cognado" 😉 If you notice, the structure is essentially the same as it is in English!
Visit our Spring Spanish Academy website: go.springlanguages.com/free-spanish-training-06e44 and sign up for a free Spanish training and free sample Spanish lessons. 🤩
Hola Maria Mi Amiga Como Esta!
¡Hola! Todo bien, ¡gracias! 😊
Excellent video-very helpful and useful!!!
Thanks! 😊
Gooooooood maria
🥰
@María Fernanda from Spring Spanish Mi Amiga!
And there are the not-so-perfect "cognados", that you will probably know too also. Words like.....
1. La bomba (bomb)
2. el carro (car)
3. el paso (pass; step)
4. tranquillo (-a) (tranquil)
5. el combate (combat, fight)
6. el choque (shock)
me gusta eso
🥰
Wooooow!
I must note that at least a few cognates in English and Spanish are spelled exactly the same but pronounced differently. That’s because the English language eventually underwent The Great Vowel Shift (which was what turned “ah, ay, ee, oh, oo” into “ay, ee, eye, oh, yoo” for Modern English).
So "error" - pronounced in English - is "EH-ruhr".
But "error" in Spanish is much different. Because of the double r, or "erre", the trilled R needs to be very strong, so it is pronounced like this---"eh-RRROHR."
Simplemente asi.
"No" es cognate.
Es cognate "no".
Cognate es "no".
I want to write/say
("No" is a cognate.)
Except, I don't know what order to put it in Spanish.
You almost got it the first time!!! 🥳🥳🥳
This is how you should say it: "'No' es un cognado" 😉
If you notice, the structure is essentially the same as it is in English!
The f****** background music ruins the video 🫤
Your not using cognate your using sentences
Your video goes to fast not helpful for the beginner.