Posts in November 2008

Latin music: Marc Anthony

Posted by adir ferreira

Marc Anthony (Marco Antonio Muñiz) was born in New York, in 1968. Born to Puerto Rican parents, Latin music was always present in Marc’s life. Singer Paul Simon was the one who helped him kick off his career by casting him to be the leading man in the musical “The Capeman” (1998). He started as a freestyle music artist but turned to tropical music after 1992. As a producer and singer, he has worked with big names in the music industry such as Thalía, Ricardo Arjoja, Tina Arena, Olga Tañón, José Feliciano, La India, Jessica Simpson, Fifty Cent, Snoop Dogg and many more.
Marc has also done acting and his songs have appeared in movies like Carlito’s Way (the song “Parece Mentira”) and Runaway Bride (the song “You Sang To Me”). His acting career includes the movies “Bringing Out the Dead”, “In the Time of the Butterflies”, “Man on Fire” and, as the controversial Puerto Rican singer Héctor Lavoe, “El Cantante”, where he shares the big screen with his wife, Jennifer Lopez.
Marc has a very strong voice and we have chosen some videos for you to appreciate it.

Hasta Ayer

El Yerbero Moderno

Vivir lo Nuestro

¡Aprovéchenlos!

 

Special adjectives

Posted by adir ferreira

The following list of adjectives is special because they don’t follow the regular “-o” and “-a” endings for masculine and feminine forms, respectively; they have only one form for both genders. Check it out.

egoísta - selfish
materialista - materialistic
optimista - optimistic
pesimista - pessimistic
realista - realistic
alegre - happy
amable - kind
eficiente - efficient
elegante - elegant
excelente - excellent
grande - big
horrible - horrible
importante - important
inteligente - intelligent
interesante - interesting
pobre - poor
responsable - responsible
sociable - sociable
triste - sad
valiente - brave

Nos vemos prontito.

 

The Subjunctive II: Irregular Verbs Forms

Posted by adir ferreira

These are the most common irregular verb forms in the Present Subjunctive. The stems are derived from the present tense first person “yo” form.

caber (to fit) - quepa, quepas, quepa, quepamos, quepáis, quepan
caer (to fall) - caiga, caigas, caiga, caigamos, caigáis, caigan
decir (to say) - diga, digas, diga, digamos, digáis, digan
hacer (to make, to do) - haga, hagas, haga, hagamos, hagáis, hagan
ir (to go) - vaya, vayas, vaya, vayamos, vayáis, vayan
oír (to hear) - oiga, oigas, oiga, oigamos, oigáis, oigan
poner (to put) - ponga, pongas, ponga, pongamos, pongáis, pongan
salir (to go out) - salga, salgas, salga, salgamos, salgáis, salgan
tener (to have) - tenga, tengas, tenga, tengamos, tengáis, tengan
traer (to bring) - traiga, traigas, traiga, traigamos, traigáis, traigan
valer (to be worth) - valga, valgas, valga, valgamos, valgáis, valgan
venir (to come) - venga, vengas, venga, vengamos, vengáis, vengan
ver (to see) - veo vea, veas, vea, veamos, veáis, vean

See you next time!

 

Cool Spanish

Posted by adir ferreira

BBC Online has many interesting resources for students who want to improve their Spanish. One of them is Cool Spanish. It’s basically informal and slang words used in Spain and some countries in Latin America. They come with audio and translations, so you won’t get lost. Check it out at http://www.bbc.co.uk/languages/spanish/cool

Here’s another very good Spanish slang and idioms online dictionary: http://www.languagerealm.com/spanish/spanishslang.php

Nos vemos prontito!

 

The Subjunctive I - Forms and Meanings

Posted by adir ferreira

The subjunctive isn’t a tense: present, past, or future. It is a mood (or mode), because it indicates how the speaker feels about or perceives a situation rather than when an action occurred. The subjunctive expresses unreal, hypothetical, theoretical, imaginary, uncorroborated, or unconfirmed conditions or situations. These expressions come from the speaker’s doubts, emotions, wishes, wants, needs, desires, feelings, speculations, or suppositions.

Forming the Simple Present subjunctive

Verbs ending in –ar.

Hablar (to speak)

Yo habl-e
Tú habl-es
Él habl-e
Nosotros habl-emos
Vosotros habl-éis
Ellos habl-en

Verbs ending in –er

Comprender (to understand)

Yo comprend-a
Tú comprend-as
Él comprend-a
Nosotros comprend-amos
Vosotros comprend-áis
Ellos comprend-an

Verbs ending in –ir

Escribir (to write)

Yo escrib-a
Tú escrib-as
Él escrib-a
Nosotros escrib-amos
Vosotros escrib-áis
Ellos escrib-an

Uses

1. The subjunctive is used in sentences that express doubt, probability. It is often used after adverbs like quizás, tal vez (maybe), acaso (in case), posiblemente (possibly) and probablemente (probably).

Quizá vayamos a lo de Juan esta noche. (Maybe we’ll go over to Juan’s tonight.)
Tal vez compren una casa en el campo. (Maybe they’ll buy a country house.)

Exception: with a lo mejor, we must use the indicative.

A lo mejor vienen más tarde. (They’ll probably come later.)

2. Expressing wishes.

¡Que disfrutes el paseo! – (May you) Enjoy your tour!
¡Que te vaya bárbaro ese viaje! – (May you) Have a good time on this trip!
¡Ojalá se recupere pronto! – I wish he gets better soon!

3. Reduplicative sentences.

Pase lo que pase, estaré a tu lado. – Whatever happens, I’ll be by your side.
Diga lo que diga, no le hagas caso. – Whatever he says, don’t pay any attention to him.
Venga quien venga, no recibiré a nadie. – I won’t see anyone, whoever it is.

4. With impersonal expressions.

It is absurd that - es absurdo que
It is advisable that - conviene que
It is amazing that - es asombroso que
It is amusing that - es divertido que
It is bad that - es malo que
It is better that - es mejor que, má vale que
It is curious that - es curioso que
It is difficult that - es difícil que
It is doubtful that - es dudoso que
It is easy that - es fácil que
It is enough that - es suficiente que, basta que
It is essential that - es esencial que

5. Expressing time condition with cuando (when), tan pronto como, en el momento en que, así que, en cuanto (as soon as).

En cuanto recibamos la herencia, nos compraremos una casa nueva. (As soon as we get the inheritance, we’ll buy a new house.)
Me cambio de empleo, tan pronto como encuentre uno mejor que me pague más. (I’ll change my job as soon as I find a better one that pays more.)

To be continued…