When I was teaching English in Spain the young students would sometimes say 'Robert, date prisa!' to get me to hurry up. (They used 'tu' with me because I was their evening teacher. But I'm pretty sure they would have used 'usted' with their day teachers at school.) Here the dar is missing its 'r' because it is of course the imperative. Some exposure in these lessons to the imperative would be of value. It's easy to fabricate the Spanish imperative in its positive forms but a little messy in the negatives.
I really like how this guy goes very slow unfortunately I speak Mexican Spanish so I get confused with the European pronunciation. I wish he would concentrate on the Mexican-American pronunciation. But doing a great awesome job keep up the good work. I have to be honest at first I laughed at someone from UK teaching Spanish. But I'm not laughing anymore.
I would be very careful who you say [ darme ] to especially if they are from Latin America. As I was told by multiple people from central America and Mexico that is slag for give me sex. Just saying. Because I used that word while asking for keys to the work van and was meet with very uncomfortable female coworkers who told me not to use that word.
@@goodfellarecordz6534 yes it was very awkward as she gave me this really weird look on her face and took two steps back and said do not say that word because it gives me the creeps and Latin people rarely use that word
That's because "Darme" sounds like you was asking her to give herself to you or you were saying you were about to give yourself to here 😅. "Tu Me Das las llaves" would've been cool 😅😅😅😅
This is what I need, thank goodness that I have it now, God richly bless you and your family and colleagues ❤🎉😂.
I'm always confused using,te,le,se but now I'm understanding it please bring more videos on se, me,lo, la etc please 😊
Gracias por este video.❤❤❤❤me encanta...
One of the best in the business 😊
I appreciate how well you explain things, thanks!
Muchísimas gracias 💙💙💙
Gracias por este video.
I’ve learned more here than anywhere else!
Thanks for explaining it in such an easy way!
Thanks . This is helping a lot for me
Appreciate the effort you put into this video!
When I was teaching English in Spain the young students would sometimes say 'Robert, date prisa!' to get me to hurry up. (They used 'tu' with me because I was their evening teacher. But I'm pretty sure they would have used 'usted' with their day teachers at school.) Here the dar is missing its 'r' because it is of course the imperative. Some exposure in these lessons to the imperative would be of value. It's easy to fabricate the Spanish imperative in its positive forms but a little messy in the negatives.
Learning pyramids are probably the best thing since sliced bread. 🎉
I really like how this guy goes very slow unfortunately I speak Mexican Spanish so I get confused with the European pronunciation. I wish he would concentrate on the Mexican-American pronunciation. But doing a great awesome job keep up the good work. I have to be honest at first I laughed at someone from UK teaching Spanish. But I'm not laughing anymore.
I don’t have a laptop only an I phone and an I pad , if I buy the course can I still access the pyramids on them , or do I need a laptop for this ?
You can access it no problem from phone/tablet.
Me alegro de que puedas tomar una cana conmigo esta tarde, Mari Carmen. Tenemos cosas que discutir con respecto a nuestra relacion.
It's amazing course but as a learner I want to see the sentence on the screen not reading
I would be very careful who you say [ darme ] to especially if they are from Latin America. As I was told by multiple people from central America and Mexico that is slag for give me sex. Just saying. Because I used that word while asking for keys to the work van and was meet with very uncomfortable female coworkers who told me not to use that word.
🤣🤣🤣 I bet that was very uncomfortable
@@goodfellarecordz6534 yes it was very awkward as she gave me this really weird look on her face and took two steps back and said do not say that word because it gives me the creeps and Latin people rarely use that word
That's because "Darme" sounds like you was asking her to give herself to you or you were saying you were about to give yourself to here 😅. "Tu Me Das las llaves" would've been cool 😅😅😅😅