For those of you confused about so the asi que [ so ] is used when you are confirming what someone was saying. For example, (asi que )so is this what you meant when you said? And the word ( tan ) for so also is used for when you are saying example. ( tan ) so we should do this or that. Your welcome. I had to ask a Mexican friend for the clarification
Deberia leer mas en castellano, pero no tengo la disciplina de seguir asi. Tal vez voy a ir a mi bibioteca manana por la manana para buscar un buen libro en espanol. Hay muchos libros en este idioma alli.
In English 'you should' and 'you have to' are used fairly interchangeably. (Even though there are precise rules which differentiate them. Rules that are broken all the time by native speakers and are really only suitable for the mindset of linguists and language teachers). I was just wondering if this is also the case with 'deberias' and 'tienes que'. Because if they are interchangeable, it doesn't matter which one we use at any given time. All we as learners need to do is choose the structure that is easiest to remember and go with that.
Your methods are very easy and helpful. Gracias de yemen 🇾🇪
These pyramids are great!! It’s helping me train my ear. I know vocab I just can’t seem to hear it yet.
Love this channel. Can you do a video on giving directions?
Please make the videos on should have, would have and could have
Make videos on subjunctivo también directo y indirecto
For those of you confused about so the asi que [ so ] is used when you are confirming what someone was saying. For example, (asi que )so is this what you meant when you said? And the word ( tan ) for so also is used for when you are saying example. ( tan ) so we should do this or that. Your welcome. I had to ask a Mexican friend for the clarification
You make Spanish seem so easy amigo.good job 😊
Deberia leer mas en castellano, pero no tengo la disciplina de seguir asi. Tal vez voy a ir a mi bibioteca manana por la manana para buscar un buen libro en espanol. Hay muchos libros en este idioma alli.
In English 'you should' and 'you have to' are used fairly interchangeably. (Even though there are precise rules which differentiate them. Rules that are broken all the time by native speakers and are really only suitable for the mindset of linguists and language teachers). I was just wondering if this is also the case with 'deberias' and 'tienes que'. Because if they are interchangeable, it doesn't matter which one we use at any given time. All we as learners need to do is choose the structure that is easiest to remember and go with that.
Muchas gracias realmente lo aprecio maestro
Gracias, vídeo muy útil. 🙏
muchas gracias, estos videos ayudame
Thanks💙💙
Can u purchase this separately, I have the 1-6 and all the additional lessons
How can yall remember this
practice
Yeah, some level of memory work is important in language acquisition.
Think of how many hours ,days, and years you have been speaking English... practice, practice and more practice
@@Jonesy1978 There's an old New Yorker one liner relevant to this - Question: How do you get to Carnegie Hall? Answer: Practice.