¡Que video tan bien conceptualizado! Gracias por aclarar este concepto. ¿Podrias hacer un video sobre quedar y quedarse, por favor? O "Palabras que indican el uso del subjuntivo, como por ejemplo siempre y cuando? Te agradezco de antemano 😄
I have a blind spot for languages: listening. The moneny I hear someone talk its like gibberish even though I can read and write spanish. I've even held conversations with old natives and learners because they speak slowly. But regular young spanish speakers... the words jumble up. It's not thru lack of exposure. I don't know anyone who has spent as much time listening to spanish stories as me. Any advice?
I think this is basically just a grammar lesson. Knowing the mood we are using is basically pointless. Learning how to form the sentences is more important. Like, knowing you’re using pluperfect doesn’t make your Spanish any better. Knowing how to conjugate a sentence to be pluperfect matters
I was gonna say exactly the same thing. I have only come across subjuntivo by chances and learned those through exposure, por ejemplo: tengas un buen dia. I heard from Qroo Paul that subjunctive it the key to Spanish but, I am still none the wiser on this video. FAR too much... maybe a good roundup for those that are already reasonably familiar, though.
Is this for real? She's running through concepts *way* too quickly to be helpful with maddeningly cheerful tone. It feels more like a parody - a sadistic teacher who's being intentionally confusing and condescending.
E.g. "When we're certain about something or something is a fact, we use the indicative" but the *first* example they give uses the indicative in a question, "¿Te vas mañana?"