Recent subbie here! Found you from search of “sentences in Spanish” I’m at the intermediate level and homeschooling my son. We really appreciate your lessons. You’re an excellent teacher (coming from a PhD ABD😅) cause idk all the things as to Spanish. So again we appreciate your concise AND FUN lessons … if you can keep my teenager engaged ❤❤❤”gracias adios” 😅😅
Love your videos they are helping me so much on my Spanish journey . ❤❤❤❤❤. Can you possible do a video on “de” and how it is used . I get so confused when to use it and where to place it in a sentence. I know it should be simple but it’s not for me 😢.
Hi! I just found your channel and I love how you teach, it's so good. But I have a question if you have the time - I've heard that one can only have two "object pronouns" in a sentence at once, and the combinations are Reflexive - Direct Reflexive - Indirect Indirect - Direct So, because all those pronoun cases share the same forms for "me, te, nos, y os", how would we tell if the "me" in a "me lo" combo is indirect or reflexive? Here's what I learned from your video - if the verb is reflexive, i.e: "me lo compré" which means "I bought myself it", we know the "me" is reflexive, and if the verb is not reflexive, i.e: "se lo compré", which means "I bought him/her it". (We could specify him or her with "a él" or "a ella"). Then... What about a situation like the following - "se lo compró". Would this mean "He/She bought him/herself it" aka the reflexive verb version, or "He/She bought him/her/them it", aka the indirect object pronoun version? EDIT - wait, I think I got it. In my example, if we were dealing with the indirect object pronoun version, we would use the "a él / a ella / a ellos" clarification, so that we'd know 100% that "se" is "le/s" after going through the double L object pronoun rule.
Me suscribí a tu canal. Ya aprendí mucho. Gracias, maestro.
Gracias, maestro.
You have cleared up all the fine details that usually causes confusion. Much thanks. You are indeed a foundation teacher. 🙌
Recent subbie here! Found you from search of “sentences in Spanish”
I’m at the intermediate level and homeschooling my son. We really appreciate your lessons. You’re an excellent teacher (coming from a PhD ABD😅) cause idk all the things as to Spanish. So again we appreciate your concise AND FUN lessons … if you can keep my teenager engaged ❤❤❤”gracias adios” 😅😅
Amazing lesson, thank you!
Eres muy claro en su definición de las gramaticales
You may not realise how fantastic this lesson is. You made it so clear and so easy. Gracias.
Man muchísimas gracias that means a lot to me 🙏 Gracias a ti por ver!
Please do more videos 🙏🏾 Your videos have helped me immensely ❤
Thank you somuch! Looking forward for more
I need reminders of how to remember i need to add these to my sentences.
Love your videos they are helping me so much on my Spanish journey . ❤❤❤❤❤. Can you possible do a video on “de” and how it is used . I get so confused when to use it and where to place it in a sentence. I know it should be simple but it’s not for me 😢.
Hi! I just found your channel and I love how you teach, it's so good. But I have a question if you have the time -
I've heard that one can only have two "object pronouns" in a sentence at once, and the combinations are
Reflexive - Direct
Reflexive - Indirect
Indirect - Direct
So, because all those pronoun cases share the same forms for "me, te, nos, y os", how would we tell if the "me" in a "me lo" combo is indirect or reflexive?
Here's what I learned from your video - if the verb is reflexive, i.e: "me lo compré" which means "I bought myself it", we know the "me" is reflexive, and if the verb is not reflexive, i.e: "se lo compré", which means "I bought him/her it". (We could specify him or her with "a él" or "a ella").
Then... What about a situation like the following - "se lo compró". Would this mean "He/She bought him/herself it" aka the reflexive verb version, or "He/She bought him/her/them it", aka the indirect object pronoun version?
EDIT - wait, I think I got it. In my example, if we were dealing with the indirect object pronoun version, we would use the "a él / a ella / a ellos" clarification, so that we'd know 100% that "se" is "le/s" after going through the double L object pronoun rule.