my - mi(s)
your (singular, informal) - tu(s)
your (singular+plural, formal)/his/her/their - su(s)
our - nuestro(s)/nuestra(s) (male/female to match what is possessed)
your (informal, plural) - vuestro(s)/vuestra(s) (male/female as above)
The (s) is added if what is possessed is in the plural
Si sabes espanol verdaderamente = if you really know Spanish 'verda' is not a word.
Pescados.
aprendo espanol aprendo espanol=I learn Spanish estoy aprendiendo espanol=I am learning Spanish
It would be jabones :)
QUIEN HABLA Espanol who speaks Spanish
espanol
Espanol is the Spanish way of saying the word "Spanish".
The plural of the Spanish word "lección" is "lecciones."
'Que palabras o frases conocen en espanol?' = 'What words and phrases do you(plural, formal)/they know in Spanish?'
Si sabes espanol verdaderamente = if you really know Spanish 'verda' is not a word.
The word in spanish for
un nino espanol agradable
Proyecto /proh-JECK-toh/ You can make this plural by adding a voiceless S at the end.
"espanol" means "Spanish", and "habla" means "speak", with the first person "I" being understood. When the suffix "amos" is added (the second "a" is dropped), the word becomes plural and means "we". Therefore this phrase means "we speak Spanish". When a business wants the public to know that the firm is bi-lingual (Spanish and English speaking), you will usually see a sign with either "habla espanol" or "se habla espanol", which means "he or she speaks Spanish" (What_does_se_habla_espanol_mean). "Hablamos Espanol" is more grammatically correct for businesses.
It means Spanish language and can also refer to a male Spaniard.
no hablo español = I don't speak Spanish no soy espanol = I am not Spanish (tilde, ~, over 'n' in espanol')
hablas espanol = (do) you speak spanish