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I believe the hardest part of learning spanish is the conjugation of verbs is this true or is there something harder. I feel if I knock the hard part out the way learning everything else should be easy is this a good strategy

2006-11-30 13:37:49 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Languages

6 answers

In a way, Spanish is a easy language because you read a word same as you write it (except some special cases).

But is true spanish verbs (their conjugation) are more difficult. I'm Spanish. If you want some help, in my profile there are links to contact me.

Greetings!

2006-12-03 21:11:56 · answer #1 · answered by David Rguez 6 · 0 0

I completely dont agree with Boricua above. My first language is Spanish, but I learned English super easy. But just trying to teach Spanish to some friends made me realize how hard to learn is my language. It has many conjugations as you say, among other things. For example, yo soy, tú eres, él es, nosotros somos, ellos son, pleaaaaaaaaase, in English all that is so easy, and I was just referring to simple present tense.

So, yes, the first thing you should learn pretty well are verbs' conjugation, and you know, all the main expressions, greetings, vocabulary, adjectives, nouns, etc.
I love my native language, for me it's the most beautiful, but I admit that it can give a tough time.

Good luck, and keep learning!!!!!

2006-11-30 22:02:07 · answer #2 · answered by Abbey Road 6 · 0 0

Well, you are right that if you do get your conjugation down, you should be able to knock out vocabulary. You can learn all the tenses and how to conjugate each verb type properly and then you learn adjectives and other vocabulary words and I think you should be on a roll! :)

2006-11-30 21:54:33 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Spanish is the easiest language to learn in the world, it is divided by syllables. For example, a word like telephone in Spanish is telefono. If you brake this word into syllables, it would be te-le-fo-no. So it is so simple the rule is that after every consonant a vowel follows and that makes it a syllable. U do have accents on some words and we have 26 letter in the alphabet instead of 24. Such as ll (double l's) and ñ the n with the little thing on top.

2006-11-30 21:48:42 · answer #4 · answered by Boricua Born 5 · 0 1

hi, I think your strategy is a good one. the best way to learn the conjugation from constant reading and listening, not from trying to memorise all the inflections. Thus you should focus on learning new words, and reading and listening as often as you can, you will occasonally realise that you have learned many conjugations on your way.

2006-12-01 09:26:45 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I think its hard learning all the tenses and remembering how to conjugate them. However, there are a lot of exceptions that have to be memorized, and that is difficult as well.

2006-11-30 21:39:47 · answer #6 · answered by RainyDayz 3 · 1 0

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