Julian
Session 2 Today my teacher and I covered soft sounding "g" - ga, gue, gui, go, gu, ge, gi and when the ''g'' is more prominent gue and gui (we and wi) - these latter more prominent sounds are appear with 2 dots above the "u". My teacher also gave me a great little chart detailing how a verb changes according to who it is you are speaking about and for the different ways a verb ends for example: To live - vivir I live - Yo vivo You live - Tu vives He/she lives - El/ella vive To work- trabajar I work in Canada - Yo trabajo en Canada Do you work in Canada - Usted trabajas en Canada He/she works - El/ella trabaja To drink - beber I drink - Yo bebo They drink - Ellos/as beben We drink - Nosotros bebemos We also went over how "h" is silent unless following a "c" and that "j" is pronounced as how "h" is in English. "ll" is pronounced as a "y" is in English and "r"s are REALLY tricky.
Sep 20, 2014 4:09 PM