The 100 most words used in spanish conversation are follows,
1. el / la (def. art.) the
2. de (prep.) of, from
3. que (conj.) that, which
4. y (conj.) and
5. a (prep.) to, at
6. en (prep.) in, on
7. un (indef. art.) a, an
8. ser (verb) to be
9. se (pron.) -self, oneself [reflexive marker]
10. no (adv.) no
11. haber (verb) to have
12. por (prep.) by, for, through
13. con (prep.) with
14. su (adj.) his, her, their, your (fam.)
15. para (prep.) for, to, in order to
16. como (conj.) like, as
17. estar (verb) to be
18. tener (verb) to have
19. le (pron.) [3rd pers. indirect object pronoun]
20. lo (art.) the (+ noun)
21. lo (pron.) [3rd pers. masc. direct object pronoun]
22. todo (adj.) all, every
23. pero (conj.) but, yet, except
24. más (adj.) more
25. hacer (verb.) to do, make
26. o (conj.) or
27. poder (verb) to be able to, can
28. decir (verb) to tell, say
29. este (adj.) this (m); esta (f)
30. ir (verb) to go
31. otro (adj.) other, another
32. ese (adj.) that (m); esa (f)
33. la (pron.) [3rd pers. fem. direct object pronoun]
34. si (conj.) if, whether
35. me (pron.) me
36. ya (adv.) already, still
37. ver (verb) to see
38. porque (conj.) because
39. dar (verb) to give
40. cuando (conj.) when
41. él (pron.) he
42. muy (adv.) very, really
43. sin (prep.) without
44. vez (noun, f.) time, occurrence
45. mucho (adj.) much, many, a lot
46. saber (verb) to know
47. qué (pron.) what?, which?, how (+ adj.)
48. sobre (prep.) on top of, over, about
49. mi (adj.) my
50. alguno (adj.) some; (pron.) someone
51. mismo (adj.) same
52. yo (pron.) I
53. también (adv.) also
54. hasta (prep.) until, up to; (adv.) even
55. año (noun, m.) year
56. dos (num.) two
57. querer (verb) to want, love
58. entre (prep.) between
59. asà (adv.) like that
60. primero (adj.) first
61. desde (prep.) from, since
62. grande (adj.) large, great, big
63. eso (pron., n.) that
64. ni (conj.) not even, neither, nor
65. nos (pron.) us
66. llegar (verb) to arrive
67. pasar (verb) to pass, spend (time)
68. tiempo (noun, m.) time, weather
69. ella (pron.) she; ellas them
70. sà (adv.) yes
71. dÃa (noun, m.) day
72. uno (num.) one
73. bien (adv.) well
74. poco (adj.) little few; (adv.) a little bit
75. deber (verb) should, ought to; to owe
76. entonces (adv.) so, then
77. poner (verb) to put (on); get (+ adj.)
78. cosa (noun, f.) thing
79. tanto (adj.) much
80. hombre (noun, m.) man, mankind, husband
81. parecer (verb) to seem, look like
82. nuestro (adj.) our
83. tan (adv.) such, a, too, so
84. donde (conj.) where
85. ahora (adv.) now
86. parte (noun, f.) part, portion
87. después (adv.) after
88. vida (noun, f.) life
89. quedar (verb) to remain, stay
90. siempre (adv.) always
91. creer (verb) to believe
92. hablar (verb) to speak, talk
93. llevar (verb) to take, carry
94. dejar (verb) to let, leave
95. nada (pron.) nothing
96. cada (adj.) each, every
97. seguir (verb) to follow
98. menos (adj.) less, fewer
99. nuevo (adj.) new
100. encontrar (verb) to find
damned
There are many common words which can be used in a telephone conversation. Some words include hello, how are you, thanks for calling, and good-bye.
The necessary interrogative words are who, what, where, when, why, and how. These words are used to ask questions and gather information in a conversation or discussion.
The letters "k" and "w" are the only two letters of the Spanish alphabet that are primarily used in non-Spanish words, specifically in loanwords or foreign words that have been integrated into the language.
"Exactamente" is a Spanish word that means "exactly" or "precisely." It is often used to emphasize agreement or accuracy in a conversation.
This phrase is a mix of English and Spanish and translates to "but I don't speak Spanish." It can be used when someone wants to acknowledge that they do not speak Spanish or understand a conversation happening in Spanish.
There are actually more then six question words (Interrogative words) in the Spanish language. This is because in Spanish the words must agree in both gender and number.cuál - which onecuáles - which onesqué - whatcómo - howcuándo - whendónde - whereadónde - to wherede dónde - from wherequién - whoquiénes - whoThe ones in bold are the six most common interrogative words used in the Spanish language.
Two words borrowed from the Spanish language and used in English are "quesadilla" and "fiesta."
I belive it's I, my, mine
There are three words that can be used for car in Spanish: auto, carro and coche. Coche is used most frequently in Spain. In Mexico, the word 'auto' is most frequent.
No. Hello is used as a greeting and goodbye is used as a farewell. In other words, hello would be the first word in a conversation and goodbye would be the last word in a conversation.
A vocabulary of around 2,000-3,000 English words can typically cover about 90-95% of daily conversation. This includes common words, phrases, and expressions used in everyday communication.