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#2
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Lina gets angry when she works too much = Lina se enoja cuando trabaja mucho/demasiado. (correct) Lina gets angry when she works too much = Line se pone/vuelve enojona cuando trabaja mucho. (colloquial) People become crazy when there is a party. = La gente se vuelve loca cuando hay (una) fiesta Cualquiera de las dos está bien. Con "una" o no. |
#3
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I liked so much this translation, the word Brava is mostly used in my country. He gets angry when loss money in the bus. El se pone bravo cuando pierde dinero en el autobus. Suggests above. Take care.
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#4
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Which part is colloquial? The "mucho" instead of "demasiado"? Or the "se pone/vuelve"? Thanks, Crotalito, for the comment about using "bravo/a" in Mexico. Other parts of Latin America? Do they use "enojado/a" or "bravo/a"?
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- Lou Ann, de Washington, DC, USA Específicamente quiero recibir ayuda con el español de latinoamerica. ¡Muchísimas gracias! |
#7
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I've heard enfadado a lot in songs from Latin America. I'd say it's more popular than enojado.
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#8
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I heard it used a lot; that's why I mentioned it.
@Lou Ann: no te enojes is the negative imperative of enojarse. There are lots of verbs that have the 'become + adjective' meaning built into them. Hernán just introduced you to 'to become angry'. |
#9
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Here we don't use bravo in that sense. We only use enojado. (bravo would be for a "macho" or "wild" caracteristic of something, as "un caballo bravo"). Enfadado is not either used. (is this ok?)
We use a lot "calentar" to say that someone is angry, but is very colloquial, and it has to be use with care for foreigners because it can have sexual connotations. But we use it a loooot more than "enojar": "I get angry when he talks to me like that" "Me calienta/enoja que me hable así/de esa manera" "¡No te enojes!" "¡No te calientes!" (I have to point out here, that we usually use for vos another conjugation that is not in RAE, maybe a deformation because of the big use we do of this kind of expressions with calentar: "calentés" instead of "calientes": ¡No te calentés!) "Estoy re caliente por lo que hizo fulanito" "I'm very angry because of what fulanito has made". I've to say this again: is very colloquial and in written language it doesn't sound too nice. In this case, you can choose to use "una" or not, but I think that is widely more common to use the article in this specific situation. *** the vos imperative conjugation of enojar is "enojés" in Argentina.
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Please, don't hesitate to correct my English. 'Time is a sort of river of passing events, and strong is its current; no sooner is a thing brought to sight than it is swept by and another takes its place, and this too will be swept away.' M.A.
Last edited by ookami; May 31, 2010 at 10:59 AM. |
#10
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![]() ![]() By the way - I thought that "vos" conjugations are in the RAE. If you click on the blue "conjugar" button next to the main word at the top of a page about a verb you get the conjugation page, and next to the 2nd person verbs there are two conjugations. I thought those were the vos conjugations. Are they not? If not, then what are they?
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- Lou Ann, de Washington, DC, USA Específicamente quiero recibir ayuda con el español de latinoamerica. ¡Muchísimas gracias! |
#11
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Yes, they are, but in "calentar" subjunctive case we use a "wrong" conjugation, that has torn very common, that's why I pointed it(It's necessary to say "pointed it out" here?). But the one that is in RAE is used too.
Thanks for the corrections ![]()
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Please, don't hesitate to correct my English. 'Time is a sort of river of passing events, and strong is its current; no sooner is a thing brought to sight than it is swept by and another takes its place, and this too will be swept away.' M.A.
Last edited by ookami; May 31, 2010 at 11:09 AM. |
#12
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What is "...that has torn very common"? I think you maybe don't want to use "torn" here.... Yes, you need to say "pointed it out". ![]()
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- Lou Ann, de Washington, DC, USA Específicamente quiero recibir ayuda con el español de latinoamerica. ¡Muchísimas gracias! |
#13
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![]() Thanks again ![]() ![]()
__________________
Please, don't hesitate to correct my English. 'Time is a sort of river of passing events, and strong is its current; no sooner is a thing brought to sight than it is swept by and another takes its place, and this too will be swept away.' M.A.
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#15
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Lol :P "that became really common"
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Please, don't hesitate to correct my English. 'Time is a sort of river of passing events, and strong is its current; no sooner is a thing brought to sight than it is swept by and another takes its place, and this too will be swept away.' M.A.
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#17
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#18
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I have never heard "ponerse bravo" in Mexico. That's rather, as Rusty said, used in Central America. "Ponerse enjoado" also sounds weird to me. The most common expression here is "enojarse". The most common expression of "bravo" here, is to talk about someone (or an animal like a mad dog, for example) who is very aggressive. The use of "mucho" and demasiado is given by the idea you have: "mucho" when the idea is "much" and "demasiado" when the idea is "too much". As for the indefinite/definite article absence, it's a matter of reading and using examples, I guess. "Una fiesta" wouldn't make much difference in meaning, but sounds a bit too heavy. Eliding (he-he) the article gives a more general idea that whenever there is a party, people go crazy. ![]()
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♪ ♫ ♪ Ain't it wonderful to be alive when the Rock'n'Roll plays... ♪ ♫ ♪ Last edited by AngelicaDeAlquezar; May 31, 2010 at 01:12 PM. |
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