Greetings Introducin Hola Hello Buenos das Good morning
Greetings / Introdución Hola = Hello Buenos días = Good morning Buenas tardes = Good afternoon Buenas noches = Good evening ¿Qué tal? = How are you? ¿Cómo estas? = How are you? ¿Qué pasa? = What’s up? ¿Cómo te llamas? = What’s your name? ¿Cuantos años tienes? = How old are you? ¿De dónde eres? = Where are you from? ¿Cuándo es tu cumpleaños? = When is your birthday? Bien/Malo = Good/Bad Estoy regular = I’m not bad Me llamo = I am called… Tengo___ años = I am ____ years old Mi cumpleaños es el…de… = My birthday is the…of… Por favor = Please Gracias = Thankyou Adiós – goodbye Hasta Luego – see you later Colours / Los colores Rojo/a - red Castaño/a – Brown (hair) Marrón - brown Azul – blue Amarillo/a - yellow Rosa – pink Gris - grey Negro/a - black Blanco/a - white Verde – Green Morado/a – purple Naranja - orange Violeta - Purple Days of the week / Los días de la semana Lunes- Monday Viernes - Friday Martes - Tuesday Sábado - Saturday Miércoles – Wednesday Domingo - Sunday Jueves - Thursday BASICS – LOS BASICOS Letter Pronunciation A Ah B Bay C Say/thay D Day E Ey F Ehfay G Hay H Letter Pronunciation Ñ Ehnyay O Oh P Pay Q Coo R Ehrray S Ehsay Achay T Tay I Ee U Ooh J Hohtah V Oohbay K Kah W Dohblay oohbay L Ehlay X Ehkees M Ehmay Y Eegreehgah N Ehnay Z Theta Opinions / Las opiniones Me gusta(n) – I like Me gusta(n) mucho - I really like No me gusta(n) – I don’t like No me gusta(n) nada – I really don’t like Prefiero – I prefer Me encanta(n) – I love Odio – I hate Los meses / Months Enero – January Febrero – February Marzo – March Abril – April Mayo – May Junio – June Julio – July Agosto – August Septiembre – September Octubre – October Noviembre – November Diciembre - December delicious Repugnante disgusting Grande – big Inteligente – Pequeño/a – small intelligent Bonito/a – pretty Tonto/a – stupid Feo/a – ugly Nuevo/a – new Feliz – happy Viejo/a – old Triste – sad Caro/a – expensive Alto/a – tall Barato/a – cheap Bajo/a – small Rápido/a – fast Divertido/a – fun Lento/a – slow Aburrido/a – boring Bueno/a – good Rico/a – rich Malo/a - bad Pobre – poor Delicioso/a – Adjectives/ Adjetivos Numbers Los números uno – 1 dos – 2 tres – 3 cuatro - 4 cinco - 5 seis – 6 siete – 7 ocho – 8 nueve – 9 diez – 10 once – 11 doce – 12 trece – 13 quatorce – 14 quince – 15 dieciséis– 16 diecisiete – 17 dieciocho – 18 diecinueve – 19 veinte – 20 treinta – 30 Treinta y uno 31 cuarenta – 40 cincuenta – 50 sesenta – 60 setenta – 70 ochenta – 80 noventa – 90 cien – 100
GRAMMAR & CULTURE – GRÁMATICA & CULTURA Tener To have Mi My (yo) tengo I have Mis My (more than one) (tú) tienes You have Tu Your (él/ella) tiene He/she has Tus Your (more than one) (nosotros/as) tenemos We have (vosotros/as) tenéis You lot have (ellos/ellas) tienen They have Name: San Fermín Su Sus His/Hers Where? Pamplona, Navarra, Spain When? 6 th-14 th July His/Hers (more than one) What happens: At 8 am each day 6 bulls are let out onto the streets of Pamplona and runners gather to run alongside the bulls. The run ends at a bullring to watch a bullfight. Remember tener is also used to say how old you are! How long? 1 week In Spanish the adjective has to agree with the noun, and is placed after the noun. e. g. El perro blanco = The white dog La manzana roja = The red apple How is it? Very dangerous Names in Spain Currently in Spain, people bear a single or composite given name (nombre in. Spanish) and two surnames (apellidos in Spanish). Traditionally, a person's firstsurname is the father's first surname (apellido paterno), while their second surnameis the mother's first surname (apellido materno).
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