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Spanish Verbs In Future Tense | Speak About Later Plans

Guide / Mo

Add -é/-ás/-á/-emos/-éis/-án to the infinitive, with a small set of irregular stems like har- and dir-. Spanish has a clean way to talk about what comes next: you keep the infinitive and attach a short ending. No verb class switch, no hunting for -ar/-er/-ir patterns. Once you lock in the six endings, you can build […]

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Greek In Spanish Name | Spell It Right In Real Life

Guide / Mo

A Greek name can be written in Spanish two ways: a traditional Spanish form, or a letter-based spelling that matches official Latin IDs. People search “Greek In Spanish Name” when they need a Greek person’s name to look right in Spanish, stay consistent on forms, or feel natural in a caption, bio, or citation. The

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Riddle In Spanish Examples | 35 Clever Ones With Answers

Guide / Mo

A set of 35 Spanish riddles with answers, grouped by level, to practice vocab, rhythm, and quick thinking. Spanish riddles are small, punchy puzzles you can drop into a chat, a classroom, a family dinner, or a study session. They work because they’re short, they make you listen hard, and they reward you with that

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1/16 In Spanish | Say It Right In Writing

Guide / Mo

En español, 1/16 se lee «un dieciseisavo» y suele escribirse 1/16 (o como fracción tipográfica) según el medio. “1/16” aparece donde menos lo esperas: una receta traducida, una regla de pulgadas, un plano, una etiqueta de taller, un formulario. Es pequeño, pero puede frenar la lectura cuando no sabes cómo decirlo en voz alta o

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Conjugate Sugerir In Spanish | Every Tense Made Simple

Guide / Mo

Sugerir uses e→ie in present forms, keeps suger- in past tenses, and switches to sugir- for many subjunctive and command forms. Sugerir means “to suggest,” “to propose,” or “to hint at” an idea. You’ll see it in day-to-day Spanish when someone offers a plan, nudges a decision, or points to a better option. It’s a

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Avena Milk In Spanish | Order It Without Awkward Mistakes

Guide / Mo

In Spanish, “oat milk” is most often “leche de avena,” and on many European labels you’ll see “bebida de avena.” You’ll hear “avena” all over the Spanish-speaking world—on cereal boxes, café menus, and in everyday talk about breakfast. The part that trips people up is the full phrase for oat milk. Some places say it

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Examples Of Impersonal Expressions In Spanish | No Subject

Guide / Mo

Spanish lets you talk about actions, rules, weather, and “what happens” without naming who does it, using set patterns like se, hay, and fixed verbs. You’ll hear Spanish speakers leave the “doer” out all the time. Not because they’re being vague, but because Spanish has clean, normal ways to speak in general terms. Think signs,

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We Live In Australia In Spanish | Say It Like A Local

Guide / Mo

“Vivimos en Australia” is the natural way to say “We live in Australia,” with “Vivo en Australia” for one person. You’ve got a simple idea to say, but Spanish makes you choose the right verb form and the right tone. If you pick the wrong one, you won’t sound “wrong” in a dramatic way, but

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Happy Holidays Wishes In Spanish And English | Sendable Lines

Guide / Mo

Holiday wishes land best when the greeting fits the moment, the tone stays simple, and Spanish accents are typed correctly. Holiday messages can feel weirdly hard. You want warm, not cheesy. You want it to work for family, friends, coworkers, or a client. If you’re writing in two languages, you also want both lines to

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How To Say 10:10 AM In Spanish | Time Phrases That Work

Guide / Mo

Son las diez y diez de la mañana. 10:10 a.m. looks simple on a screen, yet saying it out loud can feel awkward at first. Spanish has a couple of clean, everyday ways to say it, and the “right” pick depends on what you’re doing: chatting with a friend, reading a schedule, or writing a

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