Greetings, yes this is it. Thank you so much for creating this, I think it will help one to make a big leap on to fluency. Trunk you so much, Love & Light 🧿💜🖤💜🖤🧿
This video lesson is pure gold! Oftentimes, a language could* translate word for for into English; but....... a language learner should NEVER rely on this to be "the norm".
Greetings, this is so helpful. I have always struggled with learning the language and I have figured that I needed to learn the various sentence structure. This is the first video I have come across that explains it so simply and clearly. Thank you so much. Now I think I can make some sensible progress with learning now. Again, Thank you for making that so simple.
@@shamicentertainment1262 Nope, use word frequency list of the top 10,000 words first. Having a bigger vocabulary helps the most at least for me. All of that other stuff can come later.
@imeaniguess.6963 honestly, it's probably true. That, plus being able to practice with a native speaker (as native speakers will be able to update you on all of the new slang terms and such).
Buena profesora. [Good professor] Bien is more like "well." It describes a verb, or action. It will always be bien, regardless of gender, or quantity. "Estoy bien." I am well. "Dormiste bien?" Did you sleep well? "Él cocina bien," He cooks well. "Ellas trabajan bien juntas." They work well together. [all females] "Ellos no trabajan bien juntos." They don't work well together. [all men, or mixed group] Buena/Bueno/Buenas/Buenos/Buen is used to describe a noun. It also changes depending on the gender of the subject or the quantity. "La comida fue buena." The food was good. "Él es un buen cocinero," he is a good cook. "Este libro es bueno. " this book is good. "Las verduras son buenas," the vegetables are good. "Ellos son buenos empleados," they are good employees." So if you want to use bien, you could say, "Enseñas bien," you teach well. I hope my uncalled for help, helps!
Subscribed because you are just too good in your description, very exhaustive and above all you’re so so beautiful keeping me glued on the screen🔥. Kudos
Gracias por todos sus videos, ya llevo 4 años estudiando español pero aun me falta mucho aprender, sus videos me ayudan un monton. saludos de los países bajos :D
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation: 00:13 🍴 Learn food vocabulary in Spanish for restaurant conversations. 00:42 🌮 Challenge: Use learned words when ordering in Spanish restaurants. 01:18 🥓 Learn meal names: breakfast (desayuno), lunch (almuerzo), dinner (cena). 01:55 🥩 Vocabulary for different types of meat, like beef (carne), steak (biftec), fish (pescado), chicken (pollo). 02:36 🥦 Explore vegetable words: vegetables (verduras), peas (chícharos), beans (frijoles), potatoes (papas), lettuce (lechuga), carrots (zanahorias). 03:28 🍎 Discover fruit vocabulary: oranges (naranjas), apples (manzanas), bananas (plátanos), tomatoes (tomates). 03:54 🥗 Vocabulary for side items: rice (arroz), egg (huevo). 04:48 🇪🇸 Introduction to verb "gustar" (to please) to express likes. 05:50 🙋♂️ Use of "gustar" differs from English, focusing on what pleases someone. 08:29 🇪🇸 Learn the conjugations of "gustar" based on subject and number (I like, you like, etc.). 10:18 🍝 Singular nouns use "gusta," plural nouns use "gustan." 14:10 🥘 Practice forming sentences with "gustar" and indirect object pronouns. Made with HARPA AI/
Oh my goodness. Thank you So Much for this! I love your energy, and everything about your videos. Very excited to dive deeper into the pdfs you mentioned. (side note: in the last sentence structure you first said "que" could be used as a ~conjugation~ which confused me at first...but you clarified/corrected to say *conjunction* a few seconds later. You certainly kept me on my toes!!! 😆🧡💜
Heyy, your channel is so helpful for me as I just started trying to understand the spanish language! I do have a question about this video though 10:40 isn't "tu" a possessive pronoun instead of an adjective?
Greetings, can someone help me please. I try to go to the link for the guide and I get an error message the page can't be reached. Is there something else I need to be doing or is the page expired or something?
9:07 So Spanish is just French with a Spanish accent? Just like how German is just Dutch with a German accent? I'm relieved, learning this is going to be a piece of cake!
Fun fact: it's not actually an English rule to not use double negatives. It's strongly discouraged because young people and non-native speakers typically do it wrong. But there was once when the most accurate way for me to construct a sentence was even using a triple negative. While only a double, the sentence "I wouldn't be caught dead without ____" is a common double negative.
Spanish is just like French, the conjugation is a bit hard but if you’re a French Speaker or you know French it will be easier cause both languages has a lexical similarity of 75%, I just started learning Spanish from videos and from my Spanish girlfriend and 90% of time when she speaks I just compare what she says to French and I can understand a little bit
Spanish is not an easy language to learn. The verbs when conjugated includes the pronoun. Then sometimes a pronoun is attached to a verb. This makes it quite confusing for a novice like me.
Don't get hung up on learning everything in a short time. Take the information into your brain and master a few things. Once you get those to flow naturally then adding new things become easier.
There’s a rule that can help if you don’t want to worry too much about where to place direct object pronouns (me, te, lo/la, nos, los/las), indirect object pronouns (like me, te, le, nos, les), and reflexive pronouns (me, te, se, nos, se). 99% of the time, place the pronoun in front of the conjugated verb. For example, “Te llamo en cinco minutos” (I’ll call you in five minutes.). Even if you have two verbs in a row, you can *still* place the pronoun in front of the first verb, which is the conjugated verb: “Te voy a llamar en cinco minutos” (I’m going to call you in five minutes.). The exception is that pronouns are attached to the end of affirmative commands like “¡Cómelo!” (Eat it!) or “¡Hazlo” (Do it!) or “¡Llámame!” (Call me!). If your sentence contains both indirect and direct object pronouns, remember that people come before things - i.e. the indirect object pronoun referring to the person comes before the direct object pronoun referring to the thing. Persona A: “¡Tengo un regalo para ti!” Persona B: ¿Me lo vas a dar?” = Are you going to give it to me? Yes, some people will attach pronouns to the end of infinitives but you don’t have to. Sorry I didn’t explain it very well.
Vámonos and Vamos can both be used alone to say, "let's go." Though, vámonos can often appear rude as it has a sense of urgency around it. Vamos is usually followed by "a." "Vamos a la playa." Let's go to the beach. It can also be used as a cheer, too. "¡Vamos Chivas!" Let's go Chivas! [A popular mexican soccer team] For Vámonos: "Vámonos. Estoy cansado." Let's go, I'm tired. "¡Ya vámonos! Es tarde, y mañana tenemos que ir a la escuela." Let's go already! It's late and we have to go to school tomorrow." You can soften it up by saying, "si quieres," (singular) or "si quieren," (plural). Which just means, "if you want."
Hello, for my use tI would like less talk and far more examples. Also when using the electronic white board don't be so quick to get rid of a chart. It would be better to leave the chart on the screen as you add more of your explanation.
@@joltixer3099 It's recognisable, but I'm just trying to help her with her pronunciation because we don't pronounce 'adjectives' that way and she may not realise.
Nobody needs a mechanical breakdown of grammar structures. We only need examples to copy, just like how we learned our own language as kids. You're wasting time with useless terminology. Nobody wants or needs a scientific explanation of the physics of how your legs walk down stairs either.
Way too much English being spoken. You can literally explain the entire thing in 5 mins and people can understand more efficiently. By the time a person is on their 4th sentence structure, they would have completely forgotten about the first, the video is that stretched
Check out our blog for our full guide on Spanish sentence structures!
gotothe.link/sentence-structure
Greetings, yes this is it. Thank you so much for creating this, I think it will help one to make a big leap on to fluency. Trunk you so much, Love & Light 🧿💜🖤💜🖤🧿
So how many spanish sentence structures are there ,I would guess less than 100
Sentence structures begin at 1:23
Thank u
Thank u daddy
Lol😂@@jiaazhen
You’re a great teacher ! You’ve just reminded me that Spanish is not an easy language to learn but thank you for all these tips
This video lesson is pure gold!
Oftentimes, a language could* translate word for for into English; but.......
a language learner should NEVER rely on this to be "the norm".
Greetings, this is so helpful. I have always struggled with learning the language and I have figured that I needed to learn the various sentence structure. This is the first video I have come across that explains it so simply and clearly. Thank you so much. Now I think I can make some sensible progress with learning now. Again, Thank you for making that so simple.
Thanks now I can read spanish properly and actually learn.
You been doing it wrong fam. Never learn sentence structure first. Just read, and unjumble the mess.
@@imeaniguess.6963 is that a joke?? If I didn't do that with german I'd be completely in the dark
@@shamicentertainment1262 Nope, use word frequency list of the top 10,000 words first. Having a bigger vocabulary helps the most at least for me. All of that other stuff can come later.
@imeaniguess.6963 honestly, it's probably true. That, plus being able to practice with a native speaker (as native speakers will be able to update you on all of the new slang terms and such).
These points are well-explained. Congratulations on your work.
Glad you think so!
First ever video that I've watched from your channel.
You're a damn good teacher.
Bien profesora!
Buena profesora. [Good professor]
Bien is more like "well." It describes a verb, or action. It will always be bien, regardless of gender, or quantity.
"Estoy bien." I am well.
"Dormiste bien?" Did you sleep well?
"Él cocina bien," He cooks well.
"Ellas trabajan bien juntas." They work well together. [all females]
"Ellos no trabajan bien juntos." They don't work well together.
[all men, or mixed group]
Buena/Bueno/Buenas/Buenos/Buen is used to describe a noun. It also changes depending on the gender of the subject or the quantity.
"La comida fue buena."
The food was good.
"Él es un buen cocinero," he is a good cook.
"Este libro es bueno. " this book is good.
"Las verduras son buenas," the vegetables are good.
"Ellos son buenos empleados," they are good employees."
So if you want to use bien, you could say, "Enseñas bien," you teach well.
I hope my uncalled for help, helps!
@@alexanderwilliams799 this was very helpful!! Thank you for taking the time to write it all out.
Amen!!!!
Buenos dias de grecia
You are very good and tramsithave the ability to transmit the knowledge to others
Bravo 😊
Have a good day
Subscribed because you are just too good in your description, very exhaustive and above all you’re so so beautiful keeping me glued on the screen🔥. Kudos
Gracias por todos sus videos, ya llevo 4 años estudiando español pero aun me falta mucho aprender, sus videos me ayudan un monton. saludos de los países bajos :D
Baselandg is pretty good and i really like the way you teach and the subjects you cover, it's all really important and valuable stuff !
¡Gracias por el vídeo Profe!
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
00:13 🍴 Learn food vocabulary in Spanish for restaurant conversations.
00:42 🌮 Challenge: Use learned words when ordering in Spanish restaurants.
01:18 🥓 Learn meal names: breakfast (desayuno), lunch (almuerzo), dinner (cena).
01:55 🥩 Vocabulary for different types of meat, like beef (carne), steak (biftec), fish (pescado), chicken (pollo).
02:36 🥦 Explore vegetable words: vegetables (verduras), peas (chícharos), beans (frijoles), potatoes (papas), lettuce (lechuga), carrots (zanahorias).
03:28 🍎 Discover fruit vocabulary: oranges (naranjas), apples (manzanas), bananas (plátanos), tomatoes (tomates).
03:54 🥗 Vocabulary for side items: rice (arroz), egg (huevo).
04:48 🇪🇸 Introduction to verb "gustar" (to please) to express likes.
05:50 🙋♂️ Use of "gustar" differs from English, focusing on what pleases someone.
08:29 🇪🇸 Learn the conjugations of "gustar" based on subject and number (I like, you like, etc.).
10:18 🍝 Singular nouns use "gusta," plural nouns use "gustan."
14:10 🥘 Practice forming sentences with "gustar" and indirect object pronouns.
Made with HARPA AI/
Nice job AI you completely got it wrong
Bueno esta lección. Muchas gracias Maestra.
This is a useful explanation for students. Well done.
Hola: muchas gracias por los essentiales de construcion grammatico.
I like how artistic the wonderful lady is! 👍🏻☀️
Watching your video as beginner thanks for sharing. It’s very helpful
Happy to hear that!
Oh my goodness. Thank you So Much for this! I love your energy, and everything about your videos. Very excited to dive deeper into the pdfs you mentioned. (side note: in the last sentence structure you first said "que" could be used as a ~conjugation~ which confused me at first...but you clarified/corrected to say *conjunction* a few seconds later. You certainly kept me on my toes!!! 😆🧡💜
Gracias for this tutorial 🙏🏻
Explicacion exelente!
Heyy, your channel is so helpful for me as I just started trying to understand the spanish language! I do have a question about this video though
10:40 isn't "tu" a possessive pronoun instead of an adjective?
Gracias
She's a great 👍 teacher
best teacher.
Yes this what I needed. Thank you. However, I think your print is often fuzzy and too small making it very difficult to read on a phone
I went with vocabulary then structure. Makes more sense imo
I'm a absolute beginner and want to learn maxican spanish is this maxican spanish? Please tell me.😊❤❤❤
Thank you so very much
Great video. Thanks.
Very good video.
Greetings, can someone help me please. I try to go to the link for the guide and I get an error message the page can't be reached. Is there something else I need to be doing or is the page expired or something?
Hi! Do you mean this one? gotothe.link/sentence-structure
9:07 So Spanish is just French with a Spanish accent? Just like how German is just Dutch with a German accent? I'm relieved, learning this is going to be a piece of cake!
Algun dia hablaré ingles asi de bien, el problema es que aunque vea peliculas o repita lo que oigo, si no hay con quien conversar, es dificil
Have you tried making friends online?
2:28
0:11
Fun fact: it's not actually an English rule to not use double negatives. It's strongly discouraged because young people and non-native speakers typically do it wrong. But there was once when the most accurate way for me to construct a sentence was even using a triple negative.
While only a double, the sentence "I wouldn't be caught dead without ____" is a common double negative.
Spanish is just like French, the conjugation is a bit hard but if you’re a French Speaker or you know French it will be easier cause both languages has a lexical similarity of 75%, I just started learning Spanish from videos and from my Spanish girlfriend and 90% of time when she speaks I just compare what she says to French and I can understand a little bit
Spanish is not an easy language to learn. The verbs when conjugated includes the pronoun. Then sometimes a pronoun is attached to a verb. This makes it quite confusing for a novice like me.
Ive learned both spanish and french, trust me spanish is much much easier than french (which will make you pull your hair out initially)
Estoy acuerdo! Conjugación verbos es muy difícil para mí. Cada día es un lucha.
Don't get hung up on learning everything in a short time. Take the information into your brain and master a few things. Once you get those to flow naturally then adding new things become easier.
There’s a rule that can help if you don’t want to worry too much about where to place direct object pronouns (me, te, lo/la, nos, los/las), indirect object pronouns (like me, te, le, nos, les), and reflexive pronouns (me, te, se, nos, se). 99% of the time, place the pronoun in front of the conjugated verb. For example, “Te llamo en cinco minutos” (I’ll call you in five minutes.). Even if you have two verbs in a row, you can *still* place the pronoun in front of the first verb, which is the conjugated verb: “Te voy a llamar en cinco minutos” (I’m going to call you in five minutes.). The exception is that pronouns are attached to the end of affirmative commands like “¡Cómelo!” (Eat it!) or “¡Hazlo” (Do it!) or “¡Llámame!” (Call me!). If your sentence contains both indirect and direct object pronouns, remember that people come before things - i.e. the indirect object pronoun referring to the person comes before the direct object pronoun referring to the thing. Persona A: “¡Tengo un regalo para ti!” Persona B: ¿Me lo vas a dar?” = Are you going to give it to me? Yes, some people will attach pronouns to the end of infinitives but you don’t have to. Sorry I didn’t explain it very well.
@@maryelizabeth2751 bro THANK YOU, this is actually very useful tyssmmm!
In one of you'r recent Videos you distinctly said; "Vam(in)os" instead of "Vamos"' - (Just saying) 💜 💟 💜
Vámonos and Vamos can both be used alone to say, "let's go."
Though, vámonos can often appear rude as it has a sense of urgency around it.
Vamos is usually followed by "a."
"Vamos a la playa." Let's go to the beach.
It can also be used as a cheer, too. "¡Vamos Chivas!" Let's go Chivas! [A popular mexican soccer team]
For Vámonos:
"Vámonos. Estoy cansado." Let's go, I'm tired.
"¡Ya vámonos! Es tarde, y mañana tenemos que ir a la escuela." Let's go already! It's late and we have to go to school tomorrow."
You can soften it up by saying, "si quieres," (singular) or "si quieren," (plural). Which just means, "if you want."
Who is the speaker?
Hello, for my use tI would like less talk and far more examples. Also when using the electronic white board don't be so quick to get rid of a chart. It would be better to leave the chart on the screen as you add more of your explanation.
Hola te❤.
I'm fluent in English but I'll have to google some of these terms before I can understand how ghey apply in Spanish 😂
So dutch has a very different sentence structure so i need to focus on this LOL
Sorry sorry
Ella es ¡MUY bonita! 🥰 estoy buscando la @ de ella.... 😂😂😂
Pero, enserio.. . ¿Que es la @ de ella? Es para mi amigo Esteban😐
The "c" in the word adjectives is not silent. It's pronounced AD-jeck-tivs.
It really doesn't matter it could just be the accent and she pronounced it close enough for it to be recognizable so
@@joltixer3099 It's recognisable, but I'm just trying to help her with her pronunciation because we don't pronounce 'adjectives' that way and she may not realise.
Pretty good..except “nadie” and “nada” aren’t adverbs…just saying.
Man it’s hard to pay attention with such a pretty woman teaching
Way too much English
Bueno este es para principiantes. Que quieres?
Your chubiness is cute
😩
Nobody needs a mechanical breakdown of grammar structures. We only need examples to copy, just like how we learned our own language as kids. You're wasting time with useless terminology. Nobody wants or needs a scientific explanation of the physics of how your legs walk down stairs either.
It takes years for a kid to get out a grammatically correct sentence. Are you about to wait years before you can form a sentence?
Way too much English being spoken. You can literally explain the entire thing in 5 mins and people can understand more efficiently. By the time a person is on their 4th sentence structure, they would have completely forgotten about the first, the video is that stretched
I enjoyed the English explanation. Very helpful to figure out the structures
I'll say it.... she is sooooooo pretty! 🫶🏽 her @ please....
I went with vocabulary then structure. Makes more sense imo