If any one is reading this I would hold up on purchasing any course from this dude. I purchased his course, it asked me to send in my discord info to get upgraded and never heard back. In addition, I wasn't feeling the course as its just some short videos with some reading. I requested a refund and still no answer, it's already been 3 weeks.
Nate please go to New Mexico we have a very old Spanish dialect that is still here today in the rural areas of New Mexico and people still speak the Spanish from the colonial days, I would love to see you speaking Spanish to the old locals!
A Puerto Rican friend showed me how he likes to speak, how he speaks when he wants to be understood, and how his grandpa speaks. Abuelito uses assibilated r sounds to begin words. A Mexican friend puts those sounds at the end of words. Videos here on UA-cam suggest that gringos avoid that sound as it’s likely to backfire. I will say that I never knew about that sound until I saw videos explaining it. Apparently it never interfered with my comprehension. I’ve heard Argentines fully pronounce their syllable-ending s sounds when they sing. I think that might happen more often than not. Their unique y/ll sound remains in full force, though. I’ve also noticed differences when I watch Cuban UA-camrs. When speaking extemporaneously, their speech is as colorful as ever. If they’re narrating a documentary, they’re as easy to follow as what we’d expect out of Mexico or Colombia.
Me encantó la jerga del final y conozco un poco más de la mitad. Quiero usarlas todas! Mil gracias. A Mexican pareja (fresas de CDMX) told me that "chido" is a little "naco." Neta? Estás de acuerdo?
When you say "real" Spanish you make it sound like the formal Spanish we all learn in school is bad. In fact, you can always be understood by speaking formally, but not the same when using informal or common/slang language. I took Spanish in college and my teacher said no native Spanish speaker that took her class ever made an A. Can you guess why?
learn Spanish that makes people say, “no manches wey!!!” spanishwithnate.com/
If any one is reading this I would hold up on purchasing any course from this dude. I purchased his course, it asked me to send in my discord info to get upgraded and never heard back. In addition, I wasn't feeling the course as its just some short videos with some reading. I requested a refund and still no answer, it's already been 3 weeks.
Any update ?
Nate please go to New Mexico we have a very old Spanish dialect that is still here today in the rural areas of New Mexico and people still speak the Spanish from the colonial days, I would love to see you speaking Spanish to the old locals!
Questa
A Puerto Rican friend showed me how he likes to speak, how he speaks when he wants to be understood, and how his grandpa speaks.
Abuelito uses assibilated r sounds to begin words. A Mexican friend puts those sounds at the end of words. Videos here on UA-cam suggest that gringos avoid that sound as it’s likely to backfire. I will say that I never knew about that sound until I saw videos explaining it. Apparently it never interfered with my comprehension.
I’ve heard Argentines fully pronounce their syllable-ending s sounds when they sing. I think that might happen more often than not. Their unique y/ll sound remains in full force, though.
I’ve also noticed differences when I watch Cuban UA-camrs. When speaking extemporaneously, their speech is as colorful as ever. If they’re narrating a documentary, they’re as easy to follow as what we’d expect out of Mexico or Colombia.
6:14 ‐ Thanks for the review of slang words & phrases.
Me gusta mucho tus explicaciones !muy simpático! Gracias!
0:40 - Interesting how that's not really taught or acknowledged in Spanish language courses in the USA. I guess it is considered to be too regional.
mexican slang, we do not speak like that in Argentina,or Spain, or Chile or Uruguay, or.....etc etc etc
@@davealone1798
Mexico doesn't use vos. And vos isn't slang.
@@SteveSpanish411 chocolate por la noticia
echarle huevos también
Great lesson!
Go to Chile it's like Spanish in extra hard mode
Me encantó la jerga del final y conozco un poco más de la mitad. Quiero usarlas todas! Mil gracias.
A Mexican pareja (fresas de CDMX) told me that "chido" is a little "naco." Neta? Estás de acuerdo?
Necesito vídeos así para mejorar más rápido 😅
Aprendi echar la hueva de un mesero en Puerto Vallarta!
When you say "real" Spanish you make it sound like the formal Spanish we all learn in school is bad. In fact, you can always be understood by speaking formally, but not the same when using informal or common/slang language.
I took Spanish in college and my teacher said no native Spanish speaker that took her class ever made an A. Can you guess why?