"Ya"
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satchrocks
June 17, 2009, 02:30 PM
I looked at the dictionary entry for "ya." http://www.tomisimo.org/dictionary/spanish_english/ya
Is there any English word even comparable?
Por ejemplo
Ya lo veo = I see
Voy para ya = I'm going over there (I belive)
Is there any rule about "ya" at all, or is it just one of those things that I have to get used to?
poli
June 17, 2009, 02:48 PM
I looked at the dictionary entry for "ya." http://www.tomisimo.org/dictionary/spanish_english/ya
Is there any English word even comparable?
Por ejemplo
Ya lo veo = I see
Voy para ya :bad:= I'm going over there (I belive)Voy para alla
Is there any rule about "ya" at all, or is it just one of those things that I have to get used to?
Ya lo ver=now I see
Ya no=not anymore.
Ya often means enough,
Ya also means: stop it
Ya lo veo
Ya lo entiendo
¿ya entiendes?:D
lee ying
June 17, 2009, 04:44 PM
well。 you could use already. we already know: ya sabemos. I already did. Am I right?
CrOtALiTo
June 17, 2009, 06:00 PM
well。 you could use already. we already know: ya sabemos. I already did. Am I right?
Lee ying, if is true that the word already is ya in Spanish, but anyhow you can't use that word in all the sentences. For example.
Ya termine de comer.
I finish to eat.
sound better than to say Already I finish to eat.
I hope you can understand the different between they two.;)
irmamar
June 18, 2009, 04:26 AM
Sometimes, "ya" is a synonimous of "sí":
- ¿Lo entiendes?
- Ya (or ya, ya)
Even, sometimes one can say:
- ¿Lo entiendes?
- No, ya. (o sea, sí) :)
CrOtALiTo
June 18, 2009, 07:32 AM
Yes' it's right Irmamar you could to explain better the that I tried to explain yesterday.
Thank you.
bobjenkins
June 18, 2009, 08:34 AM
Sometimes, "ya" is a synonimous of "sí":
- ¿Lo entiendes?
- Ya (or ya, ya)
Even, sometimes one can say:
- ¿Lo entiendes?
- No, ya. (o sea, sí) :)
Gracias buena información,
No estoy seguro de que como pronunciar "ya"
Pienso que es como /jah/, no /yah/
Muchas gracias amigos
CrOtALiTo
June 18, 2009, 08:41 AM
You can pronoun the word of the following way.
Already- Ya (ia)
I hope this can help you.
Como el Karateca ia-ia-ia.
AngelicaDeAlquezar
June 18, 2009, 09:31 AM
@Bob: "y", when it's placed before a vowel sounds like English "y" in "yet".
hermit
June 18, 2009, 01:01 PM
aprendi mi espanol en la republica dominicana, y me acuerdo de que por alla era comun pronunciarla como 'jah' - tambien la 'll'.
mas tarde, estudiando en la universidad, todos mis profesores la pronunciaban como 'ya', inclusive un profesor muy bueno que era
de la habana.
hermit
chileno
June 19, 2009, 07:49 AM
It all depends...
If the Spanish speaker is from Central America up to Mexico and probably Northern South America, the letter Y and LL are pronounced softly. To my Chilean ears, calle is pronounced cáie, whereas South American, to my knowledge, from Peru down south including Uruguay and Argentina will pronounce more like in Spain, very strong, calle becomes caye (in English cajeh)
In Bolivia they will pronounce calle as cálhie
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