Chicken Boo said:Okay, so I stole the title from jassian. My bad.
Habla Espanol? Hablo Espanol, pero muy poco.
Chicken Boo said:De mi, para usted! (literally translated 'of me, for you')
To that I say, Gracias!
You did.ohboy said:(I was going to say simultaneously, but I'm not even sure if I spelled it right here).
Chicken Boo said:You did.
Chicken Boo said:I can count to ten in Japanese. Learned that years ago in Karate when I was a kid.
i am trying to paint a plane with my absurd pillow
Estoy intentando pintar un plano con mi almohadilla absurda.
Sam's Crow said:On Monday I'm actually doing my Spanish assessment.
Chicken Boo said:You are correct. 'Usted' is formal, 'tu' is informal, if I recall correctly.
I thought the "tu" without the stress was the same as "su."Night Terror said:Actually, if you want to use the informal way, you need to write a stress above the "u." The result is this: Tú.
Why?
When you use "tu" (without the stress), it is for property. Examples: Tu casa (your house), esa es tu computadora (that's your computer), es tu bicicleta (it's your bike). So tu = your (but only).
And when you use "tú" (with the stress), it is referring a person. Examples: Ese eres tú (that's you). A question: ¿Tú hiciste eso? (Did you do that?). An expression: ¡No soy tú! (I'm not you!). So, obviously, tú = you.
It's actually very important to use the stress.
Another example is the word "mi."
Mi (without the stress) = my. Es mi fiesta (it's my party).
Mí (with the stress) = me. Supongo que eso es para mí (I suppose that's for me). They both almost sound the same in both languages.
And it gets wider than that, but that's it for now. This was only about the stress.
Chicken Boo said:I thought the "tu" without the stress was the same as "su."
I don't know how to make a tilde on this site without cutting and pasting someone else's.
Chicken Boo said:I thought the "tu" without the stress was the same as "su."
Not that I really know, but did you mix two things with : "Adios Mio" ?
It sounds like you're saying "goodbye mine"
Adios is bye and "dios mio" .. not sure about the spelling of dios, something like "oh my god"? or gods?
But someone who knows better spanish can probably tell
For the spanish speakers : does Ola have an accent on the 'a' ?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.