4.2 • 740 Ratings
🗓️ 24 May 2024
⏱️ 7 minutes
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This episode will teach you the verbs for “lose”, “bathe”, and “shut up”, which are all very frequently used in Spanish!
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0:00.0 | Accelerated Spanish Episode 70. |
0:03.0 | How fast do you want to be fluent in Spanish? |
0:06.0 | Using our tested system that combines timeless language learning hacks with a memory palace of mnemonics, |
0:11.0 | you can be ready to integrate with native speakers in as little as one month. |
0:15.0 | In this episode, we'll learn two more AR verbs and a couple of new E-R-I-R verbs. First of all, let's go to the stream, |
0:24.6 | the final location in the woods. On the left side, we have the verb Kallar. Here, noisy children |
0:33.3 | are taught to quiet themselves, as they put it, by being wrapped in rolls of sod and rocked back and forth. |
0:43.0 | This tends to make them quiet themselves. |
0:46.2 | The verb callar means to quiet something down, |
0:49.6 | and it's most often used reflexively. |
0:52.7 | For example, he shut up in the past tense would be |
0:56.5 | Secajo. Very close to this, Joel has a so-called business of asking people if they want |
1:05.1 | baths and then pushing them off the boat while shouting, ban you. So the verb baniar means to bathe, |
1:15.9 | and it means that in many senses. Remember in Joel's library, he has an area where he likes to |
1:21.6 | ban people to the bathroom, and the bathroom is called el banio. Well, the verb baniar can actually be used to mean taking a bath, |
1:31.2 | taking a shower, or sometimes even swimming. |
1:34.8 | And it tends to be used reflexively unless you're giving someone else a bath. |
1:39.9 | Here's an example of it not being used reflexively. |
1:43.3 | You have to bathe your dog once a month. |
1:48.3 | Tienes to banier to your perro |
1:51.0 | one once al-mess. |
1:53.8 | Now let's use a normal reflexive version. |
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