Hola Sr. Briggs thank you for helping me with my Spanish, teaching me what I never learned in spanish class, thank you for acknowledging me, & for your encouragement. I'm so excited to learn spanish. I'm very humbled & thankful 😀 I enjoy learning spanish I'll continue to keep learning spanish
Wow, this is a common expression here in the Philippines, "a ver" ( pronounced as "aber" here). Me encanta ver sus videos. Siempre aprendo algo nuevo. Gracias.
@@tin8942a yes, most Filipino languages also use "pero". Also, many other words and expressions like "para", "entonces ", "ahora mismo" ,etc. In my native language, which is Cebuano, it is estimated to have more than 5,000 Spanish loan words.
Thanks! 0:42 Let's see. A ver. 1:00 Let's see! What you've got? A ver! Que tienes? 1:20 Let's see what happens? A ver? Que pasa? 1:40 Let's see what he/she thinks? A ver que piensa? 2:00 Let's see how it goes. A ver como va. 2:22 Let's see how he/she goes. A ver como le va. 2:40 Let's see how I can help you. A ver como puedo ayudarte. 3:03 Let's see who's right. A ver quien esta en lo correcto. 3:23 Let's see how we fix this. A ver como arreglamos esto. 3:40 Let's see what happens in the end. A ver que pasa al final. 4:00 Let's see. A ver
I was watching a Spanish movie the other night, trying to improve my "listening comprehension"... unfortunately it did have English subtitles, which made it almost impossible not to read... However there was one throw away line... "Por supuesto", by one of the characters... And thanks to your videos I picked up on it straight away without reading the English! Gracias, a ver ...me gustan tus videos
Gracias por sus útiles videos. Well I want to tell you the above sentence is it correct? And if it is, then shouldn't we bring ajdective 'after' noun in spanish? Like 'videos útiles '?For example we say una chica hermosa which means a beautiful girl, in which adjective is after noun but why in this sentence that I want to say tnx for your useful videos the adjective is just before noun. I don't get it. P.s I translated my sentence in Google translate by the way please help me understand if there is any exeption about 'noun and adjective' structure order. Muchas gracias 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🧡🧡🧡🧡
Hola Catherine...My apologies for the late reply. Somehow I d missed your comment...I understand where you're coming from. One of the first things you may be told when you start studying the Spanish adjective is that, unlike English counterpart, it comes after the noun. But it doesn't take very much reading of Spanish to find out that the "rule" about word order is meant to be broken; it is actually quite common to place adjectives before nouns. Certainly, adjectives - especially descriptive adjectives (ones that describe a quality of something) - usually come after the noun, and sometimes they must. But there are some adjectives that preferably come before the noun, and even a few whose meanings change depending on where they're placed...I hope that helps 😊
Other way we use it (in Chile) is as a question, it can mean "let me see/can you show it to me?" For example if someone is taking about a funny video they are watching on their phone and you want to watch it too you can ask them ¿a ver?