4.2 • 740 Ratings
🗓️ 12 June 2024
⏱️ 7 minutes
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In this episode, we’ll learn Spanish verbs to indicate “buying”, “stopping”, “winning”, and more.
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0:00.0 | Accelerated Spanish Episode 83. |
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 | Today we're going to take another trip over the enormous hill where we learn AR verbs that tend to be used with direct objects. |
0:22.6 | But in this lesson, we only have five new verbs to learn on this hill. |
0:27.6 | First, we'll go back to the burnt area of the woods where we've learned |
0:31.6 | Buscar, Olvidar, and others. |
0:35.6 | Remember that we recently learned that Significar represents a car that crashed |
0:41.4 | into the tree and caused a forest fire. Apparently this led to a mutation in the nearby trees |
0:49.8 | that causes them to sprout cars out of their branches occasionally. |
0:55.8 | Well, there's a sort of tow truck business here that extracts these cars growing from the trees. |
1:02.2 | It pulls them out and sells them to people. |
1:06.1 | The verb here is saccar. |
1:10.0 | So sacchar generally means to pull out or extract something. This is actually a very |
1:16.7 | frequent verb, relatively speaking. Extract doesn't sound that frequent in English, but saccar can be |
1:23.5 | used in many cases when you get something out of something else, and it tends to be pretty |
1:29.1 | idiomatic. For example, when you get money from an ATM, the verb saccar would be used there. |
1:37.3 | It's even used for taking a picture. Idiomatically, in Spanish, you might not take a picture but |
1:45.1 | Sackar a picture here's a simpler sentence example could you take out the |
1:52.1 | trash please |
1:53.9 | Podrease sacar la basura for favor |
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