Lessons like this really help with English. I was writing about a legal case today. I wrote "the justification for the plan was "legally adequate, just not eligible for federal funding". But the judge in his original ruling said that the justification was "apparently" not eligible. The structure I decided on was "the justification for the plan was legally adequate yet "apparently" it was not eligible for federal funding" People in California don't use little words like "yet" very often in my experience. Thank you for teaching us Americans proper English as well as Spanish.
Do a video one the different ways to use “se” this is by far one of the most confusing concepts for new Spanish learners. One of the reasons is because English speakers don’t use the passive voice very often and another reason is because that one word can be used six different ways . Great videos !!
Todavía hablo español con un acento malo, pero trato de imitar tu pronunciación tan clara para mejorar. ¡Parece como si estuviera hablando inglés aún! Gracias por tu ayuda a repasar esta gramática importante (still, yet, no- longer.). Tus lecciones son excelentes👍 ¿Ya has visto todos los vídeos de este canal? No, pero voy a hacerlo muy pronto.😜 Ya no hablo inglés cuando estoy en Espana.👍
Hola, amiga. Me gusta mucho tú manera de expresar. Tú vives en España o viajes allí frecuentemente? Todavía estoy aprendiendo el idioma y tratando hacer más amigas hispanohablantes. Un abrazo de amistad sano para usted desde aquí en mi país.
Sir, you are an excellent teacher. I like how you have combined ya and has as yas. I suppose, so as not to confuse the beginner, that aspect of oral Spanish is avoided.
Muchas gracias por la leccion. Me gusta mucho tus videos! Por favor podrías hacer un video acerca de.. había estado allá vs he estado allá y cualqier cosa que es similar.
Most of these sentences look to me like they are in the "present perfect" tence. All with a form of haber followed with the present participle. Am I right?
¿Ya has bebido sangria? OK, pero ¿Porque no: ¿ya has tomado sangria?? (I was corrected once by a native speaker online for using 'beber' instead of 'tomar' in one of my comments to one of her videos. It was Elena from Tu Escuela de Español).
@@uusfiyeyh Muy interesante, Gamer. Pero las palabras varían de un país sudamericano a otro. (By the way, I was corrected for in fact using 'beber vino' by a Spanish teacher of castellano).
Why is it al instead of el? Just like on Duolingo, it doesn't explain. They talk with the king, shows on Duolingo Ellos hablan con al rey. Why not el rey? The king
@Rompi kaushal chill out. We all knows what he means. At least he's put something out there that can help us learn Spanish. What are you doing to help us. Put up some videos and show us what you know. You sound real smart.
Loved the section on ‘ya’, in 4 years of learning nobody else explained it like this, super helpful
Lessons like this really help with English. I was writing about a legal case today. I wrote "the justification for the plan was "legally adequate, just not eligible for federal funding". But the judge in his original ruling said that the justification was "apparently" not eligible.
The structure I decided on was "the justification for the plan was legally adequate yet "apparently" it was not eligible for federal funding"
People in California don't use little words like "yet" very often in my experience. Thank you for teaching us Americans proper English as well as Spanish.
sin tus videos no puedo aprender! muchas gracias!
Gracias por su ayuda! Cada lección es esclarecedora!
Muchas gracias por todos tus videos. Estoy aprendiendo mucho.😊
Priceless right here needed this
Do a video one the different ways to use “se” this is by far one of the most confusing concepts for new Spanish learners. One of the reasons is because English speakers don’t use the passive voice very often and another reason is because that one word can be used six different ways . Great videos !!
Yip. Confuses the hell outta me.
This dude must be clairvoyant, because every vid covers something I've had a headache with for 20 years.
Muchas gracias. Un lecion muy util como siempre. 😀
😊 Muchísimas gracias .
Todavía hablo español con un acento malo, pero trato de imitar tu pronunciación tan clara para mejorar. ¡Parece como si estuviera hablando inglés aún! Gracias por tu ayuda a repasar esta gramática importante (still, yet, no- longer.). Tus lecciones son excelentes👍
¿Ya has visto todos los vídeos de este canal?
No, pero voy a hacerlo muy pronto.😜
Ya no hablo inglés cuando estoy en Espana.👍
Hola, amiga. Me gusta mucho tú manera de expresar. Tú vives en España o viajes allí frecuentemente? Todavía estoy aprendiendo el idioma y tratando hacer más amigas hispanohablantes. Un abrazo de amistad sano para usted desde aquí en mi país.
Love these videos! I need a tutor like this
Gracias🌹
Great lesson
Una lección exelente. realmente, comprendo mucho tu clases
Sir, you are an excellent teacher. I like how you have combined ya and has as yas. I suppose, so as not to confuse the beginner, that aspect of oral Spanish is avoided.
Great explanation, easy to remember!
Gracias por el video explicas muy bien puedo intentarlo quiero tus videos creo que tu eres el mejor maestro en youtube
Jules de canada
So beautifully explained! Salud Martin!
Muchas gracias por la leccion. Me gusta mucho tus videos! Por favor podrías hacer un video acerca de.. había estado allá vs he estado allá y cualqier cosa que es similar.
Me gustó la lección mucho. Tu acento español es como un nativo.
Does 'ya' also mean 'already'?
Usted me ha ayudo mucho!
Muchas gracias
Most of these sentences look to me like they are in the "present perfect" tence. All with a form of haber followed with the present participle. Am I right?
Una buena lección Pablo. No di cuenta que usa ya cuando es una pregunta
Perfect
A nicely paced lesson thank you 😀 enjoyed it. Wouldn’t ‘Ya has’ be spoken as ‘Yas’ ? In normal speech ?
I'll bet ten dollars it sounds like that. (I'll betten dollars...)
Sí y en el video el maestro lo hizo perfectamente. El dijo " yas" muchas veces.
necesitamos un vidéo a explicar ( por y para) por favor
I was thought that one mean Yet and the other mean Still depends whether it's at the front or the end of the sentance...What do you think?
so i thought al is just "to the" but its also used if you play something
A video about algo conjugation?
nyc lesson
#learnspanishbymannatsharma
¿Ya has bebido sangria? OK, pero ¿Porque no: ¿ya has tomado sangria??
(I was corrected once by a native speaker online for using 'beber' instead of 'tomar' in one of my comments to one of her videos. It was Elena from Tu Escuela de Español).
@@uusfiyeyh Muy interesante, Gamer. Pero las palabras varían de un país sudamericano a otro. (By the way, I was corrected for in fact using 'beber vino' by a Spanish teacher of castellano).
I'm guessing that in a negative question you still use aún? As in, aún no has terminado (Haven't you finished yet?)
That's right!
Bro this channels commercials infuriate me....
I listen to these while gaming and these 5 min commercials pop up
Why is it al instead of el? Just like on Duolingo, it doesn't explain. They talk with the king, shows on Duolingo Ellos hablan con al rey. Why not el rey? The king
🦓
Buena lección, pero me muero un poco cada vez que oiga un británico malpronunciar la palabra "paella"
@Rompi kaushal chill out. We all knows what he means. At least he's put something out there that can help us learn Spanish. What are you doing to help us. Put up some videos and show us what you know. You sound real smart.
Bueno