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Spanish Questions - ?

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Some of this I already know, but I just want total corroboration.

1) What is the Spanish for 'He'/'She'/'It' ?

2) What is Spanish for 'You' in general ? (As in, "You must exercise regularly to keep fit.")

3) What is the Spanish equivalent of the french 'le', 'la' and 'les' ?

4) What is the Spanish equivalent of the french 'mon', 'ma', 'mes' ?

Thanks

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7 ANSWERS


  1. 1) El/Ella/Eso (fem. esa)

    2) Tu/Usted (It depends on how formal you want to be)

    3) El/La/Los (fem. Las)

    4) Mi/Mi/Mis




  2.     1) He= EL

           She= ELLA

           It= The spanish people use IT when is a THING.

        2) You= TU, VOSOTROS, VOSOTRAS, USTEDES.

        3) Le= EL

            La= LA

            Les= LOS, LAS

        4) Mon= MI (MASC.)

            Ma= MI (FEM.)

            Mes= MIS (MAS. AND FEM.)


  3. 1)El is for He

       Ella is for SHe

       Eso is for It

    2)Usted is for You (In general)

    3)El

      La/s

      Los

            are equivalent of the french 'le', 'la' and 'les'

    4)Mi

            is equivalent of the french 'mon', 'ma', 'mes'

        

  4. 1) Él, Ella ("It", is not used in Spanish, it's more commonly replaced by "él" and "ella")

    2) Tú (singular)/ Ustedes (Plural)

    3)

    Masculine:

    el (without accent)singular

    los (plural)

    Feminine:

    la(sing.)

    las(Plural)

    4)mi(sing. for feminine and masculine nouns) , míos(plural)

    Have a nice day!!

  5. 1. él, ella, eso/esa ("it" has a masculine and a feminine form)

    2. "tú" if it's informal, "usted" if it is formal

    3. el, la, los

    4. mi, mi, mis

  6. 1- He: Él. - She: Ella - It: ésto/ésta.

    2- Deben/Tienen/etc. In your example. "DEBEN hacer ejercicio regularmente para mantenerse en forma".

    I don't know French.

    Greetings.

    An American graduated in Spanish.

  7. ►#1  He = él ; she = ella ; << it >> doesn't exist in Spanish. Examples:

    Él es profesor. = He's a teacher.

    Ella es doctora. = She's a doctor.

    Es una naranja. = It's an orange.

    In Spanish you don't have to mention the subject all the time. Most of the time verbal conjugations are enough to tell who is the subject:

    Es doctora. = She's a doctor.

    Es actor. = He's an actor.

    Soy de Argentina. = I'm from Argentina.

    As "it" doesn't exist in Spanish, all you have to do is using the third person singular:

    Es una manzana. = It's an apple.

    ►#2  Deber = must. Use the second person singular (tú debes = you must) if the treatment is informal, the third person singular (usted debe = you must) if the treatment is formal, and the second person plural (ustedes deben = you guys must) for both formal and informal:

    Debes ejercitarte regularmente para seguir estando en forma. = You must exercise regularly to keep fit.

    ►#3  You're talking about the definite article in Spanish. English definite article is "the"; Spanish definite articles are <<el>> for singular masculine, <<la>> for singular feminine, <<los>> for plural masculine and <<las>> for plural feminine. These examples should explain it all:

    libro = book; casa = house

    El libro azul = The blue book

    La casa grande = The big house

    Los libros azules = The blue books

    Las casas grandes = The big houses

    ►#4  English "my" is translated <<mi>> for singular and <<mis>> for plural:

    Mi hermano= mon frère

    Mi hermana= ma soeur

    Mis hermanos= mes frères

    Mis hermanas= mes soeurs
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