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Sueño con España
Sueño con España
It may be only a dream but this is what I'm looking for. A small town, less than 5000 people. Cool summer weather - maybe 21 to 27c in the middle of summer. A few cobble stone streets. Sidewalk cafes with people drinking coffee/wine/beer. A slower lifestyle. A place to rent an appartment for a month or two. I want to visit Spain for awhile. Am I dreaming or does it exist? |
Your sentence should rahter be "sueño con España" (I dream of Spain).
If you say "sueño de España", you'd be saying "Spain's dream". :) |
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Glad to be of help. ;)
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I exists, but 21º-27ºC only in the north. :D
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"I exists" might be better said as "It exists"... yea..my first helping post.. :rolleyes: :D :D Where in the north might it exist? @Perikles - Tenerife, in the summer as well? Edit - I just looked it up. That's not really the location I was thinking of... :) |
Sorry, I forgot the 't'.
It (:D) can exist in Galicia, Cantabria, Asturias and Euskadi (the north coast). There are other regions in the north with no so hard temperatures we are used to in summer (here 35º-38º at midday is a common temperature). :sad: :) |
(here 35º-38º at midday is a common temperature).
Eso es un poco caliente para mí. I'll be looking up those places and checking them out. Muchas gracias. |
Remember that both Galicia and Euskadi are bilingual regions. Asturias has a dialect, but I don't think you're going to have the problems you could have in a bilingual region. Both Cantabria and Asturias are really beautiful and green places (with both mountain and sea). Maybe it rains a lot there (not so much in summer), but this is the disadvantage of a green land. :)
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You're making it sound wonderful. I'm ready to go... :)
When you say "bilingual regions" could you explain that a little more? |
Two languages are spoken in some regions and both languages are official in these regions (here we say "Comunidades Autónomas", instead of "regiones"). The regions with two official languages are: Catalonia, Valencia and Baleares, where both Catalonian and Spanish are spoken; Galicia, with Galician and Spanish languages, and Euskadi or País Vasco, where euskera (Basque?) and Spanish is spoken. Sometimes you can find people who don't speak Spanish correctly or they do with great difficulty. I live in Catalonia and I see people with difficulties to speak Spanish (not very often, but in small towns is more frequent find people like that), and it could be a problem for a Spanish student.
Ask me whatever you need. :) Edit: I didn't see your edition. :D |
Your explanation was much better than what I looked up. Thanks.
That sounds a lot like some places in Canada where they speak English and French. That can make things a little difficult. |
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