Good Lord knows if I will pass my Spanish I class! I seem to be doing all right, but the material is quite difficult to grasp at times, like learning to properly 'trill' your Rs, and I also greatly dislike the spelling of the words (no offense if spanish is your native language :) ), as there are no rules to tell you when to put accent marks over the Os, Es, Is, and a few others like the ~ over the n. You have to remember them in the work along with the letters its spelled with. Just a minor annoyancce to me. However, I think I'll be alright, seeing as I do have a 4.0 GPA, not to brag. ;)
Also…..I was wondering how you go about partitioning a Hard Drive, kinda random!I MEAN NO OFFENSE TO YOU IF YOU SPEAK SPANISH! :)
Je parle francais pare que le langue est tres bon.
Lol that sounds like crap in english, forgot how to say better.Arrrrg, french! I boycott France :) Anywho, check out the last blog, about the whole white hole thing, there's an explaination, its not what you guys though it was, lol.
Lol, perfect sense.
T_T
Spanish is my native language.I hate you. jk.=)Im sorry, I mean no offense, lol :)
Accent marks are put over certain vowels if the emphasis of the word needs to be in a different place than the second to the last syllable. If you are taking a listening test, just listen for the emphasis. If it isn't in the second to the last syllable, then put an accent mark over the vowel in the syllable where you did hear the emphasis. If I'm wrong, please don't kill me! I only finished Spanish II!
I can help! i'm bilingual, and SPANISH IS MY NATIVE LANGUAGE!
lol, it doesn't offend me at all! (puts you on hitlist)ñÑ<- that's alt+164 or 165…I'm starting 9th and already have credits for Spanish I and II, so i can be a big help… (i'm starting III this year).ah a e o ooh
That's all I know.well I was going to get to go into Spanish I in 8th, but the High school class was full! :( I would've gotten the credit and be able to move on to Spanish II, but alas :(! Congrats to you though! :)
[sarcasm]Now's there's just a few more concepts to learn and you'll be an expert at Spanish![/sarcasm]
Spanish wasn't too hard, I just didn't like how there are 6 different endings for ar, er, and ir verbs for every tense. That's 18 different endings to remember per tense. There's the present tense, future tense, preterit, imperfect, subjunctive, perfect. Although I think future tense only has 6 endings…