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Billyeye 11-24-2007 12:52 PM

Spanish!! Looking for girl who wants to learn spanish
 
If you want to learn spanish contact me. Si quieres hablar español enviame un mensaje por favor.

Suki 11-24-2007 12:54 PM

Are you Spain-Spanish or South American?

Billyeye 11-24-2007 01:06 PM

Im from Puerto Rico
 
I know castellano , the spanish from Spain. Well educated spanish people should know castellano so that means I can speak spanish from spain. Do you know where Puerto Rico is?

onexsoul 11-29-2007 05:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Billyeye (Post 306137)
If you want to learn spanish contact me. Si quieres hablar español enviame un mensaje por favor.

No hablo mucho español, pero estoy aprendiendo... Yo esperabo que usted podría ayudarme a mejorar...

email me at [email protected]

Suki 11-29-2007 09:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Billyeye (Post 306139)
I know castellano , the spanish from Spain. Well educated spanish people should know castellano so that means I can speak spanish from spain. Do you know where Puerto Rico is?

Yeah I know where it is. How come you speak Spain-Spanish if you're from Puerto Rico?

It's kinda funny how South American people use the formal form when speaking Spanish (referring to onexsoul's previous post) ^_^ it's hardly used at all in Spain.

onexsoul 11-29-2007 11:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Suki (Post 313062)
Yeah I know where it is. How come you speak Spain-Spanish if you're from Puerto Rico?

It's kinda funny how South American people use the formal form when speaking Spanish (referring to onexsoul's previous post) ^_^ it's hardly used at all in Spain.

really??

thats funny cuz when im learning it they say that "spain uses the most formal kind of spanish" lol,

Suki 11-30-2007 02:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by onexsoul (Post 313141)
really??

thats funny cuz when im learning it they say that "spain uses the most formal kind of spanish" lol,

lol well we do in a way. We are the Spanish-speaking country that's less in contact with foreign languages, that's why Mexican and all the originally Spanish-speaking cultures have developed their own dialect and sound kinda different nowadays and there's also a great deal more slang usage due to its contact with English. But I meant formal as in the way the pronouns are used. In Spain we say: ¿Cómo estás?, notice the S that makes it informal; in South America they'll say: ¿Cómo está?, and use the pronoun "usted" instead of "you"; we only do that when we're speaking in a high level of formality.

onexsoul 11-30-2007 04:03 PM

i have ben taught to use Yo, Tú, El, Ella, Usted, Nosostros, Vosotros, Ellos, Ellas, Ustedes.

I think that vosostros is the formal one...

Daydreamer 11-30-2007 04:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Suki (Post 313726)
lol well we do in a way. We are the Spanish-speaking country that's less in contact with foreign languages, that's why Mexican and all the originally Spanish-speaking cultures have developed their own dialect and sound kinda different nowadays and there's also a great deal more slang usage due to its contact with English. But I meant formal as in the way the pronouns are used. In Spain we say: ¿Cómo estás?, notice the S that makes it informal; in South America they'll say: ¿Cómo está?, and use the pronoun "usted" instead of "you"; we only do that when we're speaking in a high level of formality.


well we also use "como estas". we only use "como esta" for grownups, that means we have respect towards them.:D

Daydreamer 11-30-2007 04:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by onexsoul (Post 313778)
i have ben taught to use Yo, Tú, El, Ella, Usted, Nosostros, Vosotros, Ellos, Ellas, Ustedes.

I think that vosostros is the formal one...

actually that means exactly the same as nosotros.
it is just that in different countries we say it differently but we still understand each other.:D

Slykaz1 11-30-2007 04:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Suki (Post 313726)
lol well we do in a way. We are the Spanish-speaking country that's less in contact with foreign languages, that's why Mexican and all the originally Spanish-speaking cultures have developed their own dialect and sound kinda different nowadays and there's also a great deal more slang usage due to its contact with English. But I meant formal as in the way the pronouns are used. In Spain we say: ¿Cómo estás?, notice the S that makes it informal; in South America they'll say: ¿Cómo está?, and use the pronoun "usted" instead of "you"; we only do that when we're speaking in a high level of formality.

I was taught to say "Buenos dias, como esta usted?"
or when being called upon "mande usted?"
in introductions "mi nombre es blah blah blah, para servirle usted."
and don't forget " senor blah blah" "senora blah blah" (sorry I don't know where my accents are on my comp)
I was smacked if I wasn't polite. :rolleyes:

Suki 12-01-2007 12:53 PM

Slykaz, only slaves say that when addressing to their masters xD It's not really used in day to day life, not in Spain anyways. And it's not about politeness, but using the term 'usted' would make you sound like you are one century back xD

Quote:

Originally Posted by Daydreamer
actually that means exactly the same as nosotros.

Usted can only mean 'tú' [you, singular] and ustedes means 'vosotros' [you, plural].

heden 12-02-2007 06:10 AM

wow! wow! wow!
i really wanna learn spanish from all of you!
i understand nothing about spanish. i only know this word 'hola a todos:ywave:' and if you ask me 'como estas?', i dont have an idea how to answer it. mm.. maybe like this 'bien,gracias' :D
lol i dont speak spanish but i want to learn. would you care to teach me spanish?

Slykaz1 12-02-2007 06:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Suki (Post 314703)
Slykaz, only slaves say that when addressing to their masters xD It's not really used in day to day life, not in Spain anyways. And it's not about politeness, but using the term 'usted' would make you sound like you are one century back xD

So mannerism, is slave talk? Ok.....then what do you say to be polite? when talking to your elders? Or talking to someone you don't know? I'm curious to know from you...:p

Suki 12-02-2007 07:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Slykaz1 (Post 315851)
So mannerism, is slave talk? Ok.....then what do you say to be polite? when talking to your elders? Or talking to someone you don't know? I'm curious to know from you...:p

Well, if you were talking to the King then yeah you'd probably use this term xD and politicians also refer to each other in courteous terms like these, but that's about the only situation in which you'll hear it.

So what we do in order to show politeness is use the 3rd person singular form instead of the 2nd one when talking to someone:

Informal, most used form --> ¿Cómo te encuentras? [How are you feeling?]

Formal form --> ¿Cómo se encuentra? [same meaning, the 'se' makes it formal]

And if you wanted to make it EXTRA-polite then you'd say --> ¿Cómo se encuentra usted?

But for reals, you can talk to an unknown person and use the formal form and it won't make you sound rude or anything.

Quote:

Originally Posted by heden (Post 315414)
wow! wow! wow!
i really wanna learn spanish from all of you!
i understand nothing about spanish. i only know this word 'hola a todos:ywave:' and if you ask me 'como estas?', i dont have an idea how to answer it. mm.. maybe like this 'bien,gracias' :D
lol i dont speak spanish but i want to learn. would you care to teach me spanish?

As you may already know '¿Cómo estás?' means 'How are you?'. There're many possible answers, the most common one would be: 'Bien, gracias' (Good, thank you) or 'Mejor que nunca' (Never better) xD!

Oh and don't expect to learn Spanish on here, I can teach you some expressions or random vocabulary if you want though.

heden 12-06-2007 05:07 AM

As you may already know '¿Cómo estás?' means 'How are you?'. There're many possible answers, the most common one would be: 'Bien, gracias' (Good, thank you) or 'Mejor que nunca' (Never better) xD!

Oh and don't expect to learn Spanish on here, I can teach you some expressions or random vocabulary if you want though.[/quote]


sure, i want it:happypika:


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