spanish at church lesson 6
TRANSCRIPT
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BienvenidosEstudiantes
Leccin 6
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Translation Oops
A friend was lecturing in Latin America. He was going to usea
translator, but to identify with his audience, he wanted to begin
his talk by saying in Spanish, "Good evening, ladies andgentlemen." He arrived at the auditorium a little early and
realized he did not know the Spanish words for ladies and
gentlemen. Being rather resourceful, he went to the part of the
building where the restroom
s were, looked at the signs on thetwo doors, and memorized those two words. When the
audience arrived and he was introduced, he stood up and said
in Spanish, "Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. "The
audience was shocked. He didn't know whether he had
offended them or perhaps they hadn't heard him or understoodhim. So he decided to repeat it. Again in Spanish he said,
"Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. "One person in the
audience began to snicker. Pretty soon the entire audience was
laughing. Finally, someone told him thathe had said, "Good
evening, bathrooms and broom closets!"
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DICTIONARY LESSON
YOU T
RANSL
ATE THESE:
WHEN DO YOU SPEAK SPANISH?
Cundo hablas espaol?
WHY
D
O THEY
SING
ATC
HURC
H? Por qu cantan a la iglesia?
WHO HAS THE MONEY?
Quin tiene el dinero?
HOW ARE YOU GOING TO WORK?
Cmo vas a trabajar?
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DICTIONARYCONTINUED
DOES SHE SWIM IN THE POOL?
Nada en la piscina?
WHER
ED
O THEY
DRI
NK
WINE?
Dnde toman (beben) el vino?
HOW MANY TABLES DO WE NEED?
Cuntas mesas necesitamos?
Which teacher rides the bus?
Cul profesormonta el autobs?
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PRONUNCIATION
PER
SONA
LITIES
Sociable, atrevido, flojo, torpe,desordenado, valiente, atletico,
maravilloso, trabajador, simptico,antiptico, genio, agradable,exigente, artistico, timido,
estudioso, paciente, impaciente,
reservado, talentoso, gracioso,deportista, elegante, hablador,
crudo, amable
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POSSESSIVE ADJECTIVES
ANDTALKING ABOUT THE
WEATHER
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POSSESSIV
EADJECTIVES
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What is a
Possessive Adjective?
Possessive Adjectives are
adjectives that show that an
object belongs to a person.
For example:
This is mybook.
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What are the Spanish
Possessive Adjectives?
Singular Forms
Mi My
Tu Your
Su His, Her, Your
Nuestro(a) Our
Su Their, Your
These forms are used in front of singular nouns.
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What are the Spanish
Possessive Adjectives?
Plural Forms
Mis My
Tus Your
Sus His, Her, Your Nuestro(a)s Our
Sus Their, Your
These are used in front ofplural nouns.
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Important points to remember
In Spanish, the possessive adjectivemust agree in gender and number
with the noun being described.
For example:
Our cars
Nuestros coches
Masculine, plural Masculine
form plural noun
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Practice Examples
Our books
Nuestros libros
Her houseSu casa
Your (sing. fam.) dog
Tu perro
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Possession using Names or Nouns
When attempting to showthat an object belongs toa person, by using their
name; the construction isa little different.
Marys Spanish book
Ellibro de espaolde Maria
or literally,The book ofSpanish of
Mary
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Deciding Which Form to Use
When given words like: my, his,
our, or yours; we use the
forms: mi, su, nuestro , su.
When given a noun or name,
such as: Henrys, or the girls;
we use the forms: de Enrique,
de la muchacha.
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More PracticeYou have 5 minutesHis notebook
My parents car
OurSpanish class
Your work (plural,
formal)
Their neighbors
Your friends house
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Las Respuestas
His notebooksu cuaderno
My parents car
el coche de mis padres
OurSpanish classnuestra clase de espaol
Your work (plural, formal)
su trabajo
Their neighborssus vecinos
Your friends house
La case de tu amigo
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Qu tiempo hace?
La primavera
El invierno
El otoo
El verano
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Qu tiempo hace?
Hace +
buen / mal tiempo
sol
calorfrofrescoviento
(muy)
(mucho)
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Hace buen tiempo
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Hace mal tiempo
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Hace
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solsolsolsolcalorcalorcalorcalor
frofrofrofro
vientovientovientovientofrescofrescofrescofresco
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Qu tiempo hace?
Est soleado.
Est lloviendo.
Est nublado.
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Qu tiempo hace?
Llueve. Nieva.
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(Va a llover.)(La lluvia)
(Va a nevar.)(La nieve)
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Qu temperatura hace?
Hace + nmero grados+
Hace 95 gradosFarenheit.
(Hace 35 gradosCentgrado.)
Hace 32 grados
Farenheit.
(Hace 0 gradosCentgrado.)
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Qu tiempo hace
en el otoo?
en el verano?
en el mes de diciembre?
en Chile en el mes de octubre?
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IDIOMS
An idiom is a phrase that is understood to have ameaning different from its literal meaning. For
example, in English when we say "it's raining cats
and dogs" we mean it's raining heavily, it's a
downpour.
Like the cats and dogs example, idioms are fun,
colorful expressions and the direct translation of an
idiom from one language to another is oftenhilarious.
Or does get offmy back literally mean that?
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No tiene dos dedos de frente.
Literally means: He doesn't have two fingers of forehead.The English equivalent is: He's not the sharpest tool in the
shed.
Tiene ms lana que un borrego.
Literally means: He has more wool than a lamb.The English equivalent is: He's loaded with cash.
A otro perro con ese hueso.
Literallym
eans: To another dog with that bone.The English equivalent is: You're pulling my leg.
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Cada quien tiene su manera de matar
pulgas.Literally means: Each has his way to kill
fleas.
The English equivalent is: There's more than
one way to skin a cat.
La carne de burro no es transparente.
Literallym
eans: The flesh of the donkey is nottransparent.
The English equivalent is: I can't see through you.
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El hijo de la gato, ratones mata.
Literally means: The son of a cat kills mice.
The English equivalent is: Like father like son.
Antes que te cases mira lo que haces.Literally means: Before you marry look what you
are doing.
The English equivalent is: Look before you leap.
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HASTA LUEGOCOMPAEROS!