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-   -   ¿El mejor periódico? (https://forums.tomisimo.org/showthread.php?t=4075)

¿El mejor periódico?


bobjenkins May 23, 2009 09:23 PM

¿El mejor periódico?
 
`Yo quiero leer algas noticias cada día. ¿Cuáles es el mejor?

Ya yo trataba (abc.es) y (elperiódico.com)

¿Hay más mejor que estas paginas?

gracias amigos:good:

CrOtALiTo May 23, 2009 10:26 PM

I recommending you this newspaper www.eluniversal.com

This newspaper is from Mexico, but there are a lot of news above my country, as the singers and other kinds to news, you can go out and later practice your Spanish, besides if you try to read everything the news but daily I think that in a little times you will be able to read in Spanish.

Just I was wondering it.

Tomisimo May 23, 2009 10:30 PM

I usually open up www.eluniversal.com.mx and www.elpais.com on a daily basis.

bobjenkins May 23, 2009 10:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CrOtALiTo (Post 36976)
I recommending you this newspaper www.eluniversal.com

This newspaper is from Mexico, but there are a lot of news above my country, as the singers and other kinds to news, you can go out and later practice your Spanish, besides if you try to read everything the news but daily I think that in a little times you will be able to read in Spanish.

Just I was wondering it.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tomisimo (Post 36978)
I usually open up www.eluniversal.com.mx and www.elpais.com on a daily basis.

¡Gracias amigos! Es bueno leer algo español cada día:)

irmamar May 24, 2009 10:55 AM

El País is considered as the best newspaper in Spain. Which one would you advise in English?

bobjenkins May 24, 2009 03:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by irmamar (Post 36997)
El País is considered as the best newspaper in Spain. Which one would you advise in English?

Irmamar gracias amiga, El país es buena:) El mejor periódico en inglés... hmm..
www.nytimes.com o www.usatoday.com

aaronibus62 May 27, 2009 09:16 AM

I agree with bob about USA Today. I buy the print version every day to read for work.

As for regional and local dailies, it depends on which parts of the US are of interest to you.

I live in Brockton, Massachusetts, where most locals check out the online edition of our paper The Enterprise at www.enterprisenews.com or The Boston Globe at www.boston.com/bostonglobe ...

Today's print version of the Globe has a nice photo of President Obama and his Supreme Court Justice pick Sonia Sotomayor. If she is confirmed, she'll be the first Hispanic to serve in the US Supreme Court.

One other thing. The Globe's print edition was almost shut down because of the millions of dollars it loses each year. Following concessions from labor unions to the amount of $20 million, the Globe will continue in print, at least for now. Unfortunately, both daily and Sunday editions now cost too much and aren't worth the price. I'll stick with the free website :-)

CrOtALiTo May 27, 2009 11:41 AM

Yes, as you said before, in U.S.A there are more possibility to read newspaper anywhere, beside of my country there are much newspapers in my country but they are to different places, where you can read the news in paper and you can be informed of the that happen in my country, I written before one website where you can check the news from internet, and well I hope you can watch them.

www.eluniversal.com.

Fazor May 27, 2009 12:16 PM

Leo La Crónico de Hoy (Ciudad de México) de vez en cuando. Usualmente no lo comprendo mucho, pero el partes puedo leo son interesante.

CrOtALiTo May 27, 2009 12:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fazor (Post 37255)
Leo La Crónico de Hoy (Ciudad de México) de vez en cuando. Usualmente no lo comprendo mucho, pero el partes puedo leo son interesante.

Yes, I know it, and I have saw that newspaper in my country, and that newspaper is very interesting, because here you can check everything about the that happen in my country and international ones too.

AutumnBreeze May 28, 2009 05:45 AM

I tend to gravitate toward weeklies myself :D . I like

http://atlanta.creativeloafing.com/

which is in English. I've been attempting :rolleyes: to read

http://www.mundohispanico.com/

in Spanish. Not sure how it compares with the other papers listed in this thread but I can pick up a copy just about anywhere :thumbsup: .

They've both been around for quite a while.

I'll have to check out some of these other links :) .

CrOtALiTo May 28, 2009 08:28 AM

The links that you have written here before are about the newspapers in the website right.

I didn't know anything about them, but I believe that you have give one great resource in this forums for the people who needs to practice their English.


Sincerely yours.

irmamar May 28, 2009 12:38 PM

But I'd like to know some British newspapers. Does anybody here know any?

Tomisimo May 28, 2009 01:53 PM

I read www.timesonline.co.uk, www.guardian.co.uk, and www.bbc.co.uk from time to time.

AutumnBreeze May 28, 2009 02:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by irmamar (Post 37327)
But I'd like to know some British newspapers. Does anybody here know any?

Sorry 'bout that irmamar :o . When I read your post below:

Quote:

Originally Posted by irmamar (Post 36997)
El País is considered as the best newspaper in Spain. Which one would you advise in English?

I did not realize you meant British English :) .

Quote:

Originally Posted by CrOtALiTo (Post 37312)
The links that you have written here before are about the newspapers in the website right.

I didn't know anything about them, but I believe that you have give one great resource in this forums for the people who needs to practice their English.


Sincerely yours.

Good deal then CrOtALiTo :thumbsup: . I really like Creative Loafing's style and the stories they report on.

Wow, I'm sure I could have found a better way to say that previous sentence but oh well. Sometimes my English is just plain bad :shh: .

CrOtALiTo May 28, 2009 03:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AutumnBreeze (Post 37341)
Sorry 'bout that irmamar :o . When I read your post below:


I did not realize you meant British English :) .


Good deal then CrOtALiTo :thumbsup: . I really like Creative Loafing's style and the stories they report on.

Wow, I'm sure I could have found a better way to say that previous sentence but oh well. Sometimes my English is just plain bad :shh: .


Thank you.

irmamar May 29, 2009 01:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AutumnBreeze (Post 37341)
Sorry 'bout that irmamar :o . When I read your post below:


I did not realize you meant British English :) .


Good deal then CrOtALiTo :thumbsup: . I really like Creative Loafing's style and the stories they report on.

Wow, I'm sure I could have found a better way to say that previous sentence but oh well. Sometimes my English is just plain bad :shh: .

Don't worry AutumnBreeze, I didn't specify. But I'm asked to learn British English; sometimes I'm a bit afraid because there is a lot of American English here, although I understand the same. But the differences between some words are what make me feel a bit worried.:confused:

bobjenkins May 29, 2009 01:45 AM

Irmamar, no te preocupes por la diferencia entre las palabras:) Yo miraba muchos programmas de Inglaterra, y hay un poco palabras que son diferentes.

lista de las palabras (más común)
y más grande lista

Pienso que ellos te entenderán aquí o en Inglaterra perfectamente, si tu usas cualquiera las dos:) POr ejemplo aquí usamos zipcode y postal code

inglaterra = america (más grande diferencia, pero te entiendo si usas cualquiera las dos)

flat = apartment
petrol = gasoline
bonnet = hood
lorry = truck

CrOtALiTo May 29, 2009 07:53 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by irmamar (Post 37364)
Don't worry AutumnBreeze, I didn't specify. But I'm asked to learn British English; sometimes I'm a bit afraid because there is a lot of American English here, although I understand the same. But the differences between some words are what make me feel a bit worried.:confused:

Yes, you are right, because sometimes when you are reading some post the words of the natives Americans are very different so as the Spain natives are very different, I believe that the words does not the different without the different does the person of the way as he/she express the sentence, sometimes I have the same problem than you have, but I try to read two times over the sentence and well, so I had learnt to understand the English, and well I'm not to be afraid in the I say.:eek:

AutumnBreeze May 29, 2009 01:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by irmamar (Post 37364)
Don't worry AutumnBreeze, I didn't specify. But I'm asked to learn British English; sometimes I'm a bit afraid because there is a lot of American English here, although I understand the same. But the differences between some words are what make me feel a bit worried.:confused:

I used to watch the old school 'Dr. Who' and 'Absolutely Fabulous' (not sure how popular they were with Brits but I liked them :lol: ). When I first started watching there would be phrases and words that just left me :thinking: . But I eventually got it. And overall it's not as hard to get the vocab differences down as it it to understand some of the accents. Well, to me anyway.

Even here in the States, you should see a native New Yorker and a native to the deep south Georgian have a conversation :cool: .


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