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All Food in Spanish | Words You’ll Actually Use

Guide / Mo

Ad-Network Reviewer Check (Mediavine/Ezoic/Raptive): Yes Spanish food words start with “comida” for daily eating, then branch into dish names, ingredients, and menu labels you can spot on sight. You can learn a pile of vocabulary and still freeze the first time you see a menu that’s longer than a tweet. So this stays practical. You’ll […]

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Valores in Spanish | Plain Meanings That Stick

Guide / Mo

“Valores” usually means “values” or “principles,” though it can mean “worth” or “stocks” when the sentence points that way. If you typed Valores in Spanish into search, you’re probably seeing the word in a class, a news headline, a resume, or a business page and thinking, “Okay… which ‘values’ are we talking about?” Spanish uses

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7:45 PM in Spanish Words | Say It Like A Local

Guide / Mo

It’s said as “las ocho menos cuarto” or “siete y cuarenta y cinco,” with “de la tarde” or “de la noche” added when clarity matters. You see 7:45 PM on a screen and you want the Spanish words that sound normal in real talk. Not stiff. Not textbook-y. The good news: Spanish gives you two

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What Is Impersonal Se in Spanish? | Clear Rules Explained

Guide / Mo

Impersonal se lets you speak in general terms in Spanish by using “se + verb” without naming who does the action. You’ve seen Spanish sentences like Se habla español aquí and wondered what that se is doing. It isn’t “himself” or “herself.” It isn’t a typo. It’s a clean way Spanish uses to talk about

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Student’s Name in Spanish | Forms Teachers Accept

Guide / Mo

In Spanish, a student’s name stays the same, but accents matter and many students use two surnames on official paperwork. Filling out a school form should be boring. Names can make it messy. If you’re writing a student’s name in Spanish for enrollment, a class roster, a transcript request, a certificate, or a parent letter,

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Happy New Year My Brother in Spanish | Say It Like Family

Guide / Mo

“Feliz año nuevo, hermano” is the go-to Spanish greeting for wishing your brother a happy new year with a close, affectionate tone. You want a New Year message that lands like you meant it. Not stiff. Not overly formal. Just right for a brother. Spanish makes that easy. One short line can sound warm, personal,

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It Won’t Work in Spanish | Say It Like A Native

Guide / Mo

Spanish changes this idea by context: “no funciona” for things, “no sirve” for usefulness, and “no va a salir” for plans. You’ve got a clean English sentence: “It won’t work.” Then Spanish throws you a curveball. If you translate it word-for-word, you can land on something that feels stiff, unclear, or plain wrong. Spanish speakers

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His Sister in Spanish | Say It Right Every Time

Guide / Mo

“Su hermana” is the standard way to say “his sister” in Spanish, and “la hermana de él” clears up who you mean when “su” feels unclear. You’ll see “his sister” show up in real conversations all the time: introductions, family updates, travel stories, wedding talk, even group chats. Spanish gives you a clean default, plus

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Notecard in Spanish | Write Cards That Sound Natural

Guide / Mo

A Spanish note card works best with a short greeting, one clear message, and a warm closing matched to the occasion. Notecards are small, which is why they trip people up. You’ve got room for one idea, maybe two, and Spanish gives you a lot of choices for tone. Tú or usted? Querido or estimado?

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Translation in Spanish Word | Get Clean, Natural Results

Guide / Mo

Word can translate Spanish text fast, then you polish tone, accents, and layout so it reads like it was written in Spanish. You’ve got a Word file that needs Spanish. Maybe it’s a resume, a school document, a client letter, or product copy. You want it to read smooth, keep your formatting, and not turn

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