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Old May 18, 2009, 02:57 PM
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Originally Posted by laepelba View Post
Nosotros somos gringos, los dos! Se usa "tomar" por "to drink", tambien. Yo no sé cuál es mejor en la oración.
¡Ah! Siempre nosotros gringos tratábamos de mezcla en con los nativos, pero siempre saben somos gringos, nuestros esfuerzos son en vana jeje
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  #12  
Old May 18, 2009, 03:18 PM
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Originally Posted by laepelba View Post
Thanks - I like the "irritan" better than the "molestan". By the way - would you choose "beber" or "tomar"?
Both will be alright. "Beber" sounds more "educated" and "tomar" is a little more popular.
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Old May 18, 2009, 03:42 PM
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Originally Posted by AngelicaDeAlquezar View Post
Both will be alright. "Beber" sounds more "educated" and "tomar" is a little more popular.
Es incorrecto decir, "Me duele el estómago porque bebé muchas aguas residuales" ¡Ciertamente, tonto, pero es gramatica correcta?

jeje gracias
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Old May 18, 2009, 04:52 PM
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¡¡Aguas residuales!! *yuck!!*

But "Me duele el estómago porque bebí muchas aguas residuales" would be grammatically correct.
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Old May 18, 2009, 05:00 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by AngelicaDeAlquezar View Post
¡¡Aguas residuales!! *yuck!!*

But "Me duele el estómago porque bebí muchas aguas residuales" would be grammatically correct.
Maldición (curse?) la persona que inventó estes conjugaciónes jeje
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Old May 18, 2009, 07:28 PM
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Too many people to be cursed then... your sentence could be like:

"Maldición a la persona que inventó estas conjugaciones."

"Maldita sea la persona que inventó estas conjugaciones." Although this sentence is too strong.

Maybe I would say "¿quién diablos inventó estas conjugaciones?", which means more or less "who on earth invented this conjugations?"

Let me again recommend you use a manual for conjugation... rules will be clearer and you'll learn to do it yourself and feel when a conjugation is more appropriate for each kind of verb.
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Old May 18, 2009, 07:35 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by AngelicaDeAlquezar View Post
Too many people to be cursed then... your sentence could be like:

"Maldición a la persona que inventó estas conjugaciones."

"Maldita sea la persona que inventó estas conjugaciones." Although this sentence is too strong.

Maybe I would say "¿quién diablos inventó estas conjugaciones?", which means more or less "who on earth invented this conjugations?"

Let me again recommend you use a manual for conjugation... rules will be clearer and you'll learn to do it yourself and feel when a conjugation is more appropriate for each kind of verb.
Sí gracias, he comprado este libre.


Estoy feliz lo que compré

Lo me ayuda mucho en estes dos meses

¿Cómo se dice, "Thank you again"? Una vez gracias?

gracias
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Old May 18, 2009, 08:24 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bobjenkins View Post
, gracias. He comprado este libro.

Estoy feliz que lo comprara. (Lo is a direct object pronoun, used instead of libro. It agrees in number and gender with the direct object it replaces (libro). Subjunctive must be used when expressing emotion.)

Lo me ha ayudado mucho en estos dos meses. (Lo is not a subject pronoun. The subject pronoun 'it' is usually omitted when the third-person ending is used (ha), but you could use él (must agree in number and gender with the subject the pronoun replaces (libro): él me ha ayudado mucho.)

¿Cómo se dice, "Thank you again"? Una vez gracias?
Gracias, de nuevo. -o- Gracias, otra vez.
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  #19  
Old May 19, 2009, 08:24 AM
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Sí gracias, he comprado este libro.
[...]
I've checked that Barron's and I hope you'll find it useful, although I think these kinds of books are the same as searching for a conjugation in internet.
There are some manuals that help you associate kinds of verbs and their conjugation, which makes your mind build them by yourself after regular use.
I found one of these in Amazon. It's all in Spanish, but it's not hard to understand: Conjugación Lengua Española. Larousse.
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