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Raul Templet

Grammar book

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Page 1: Grammar book

Raul Templet

Page 2: Grammar book

Table of Contents

1: Nationalities

2: Stem Changers

3: Indirect Object Pronouns

4: Gustar

5: Affirmative & Negative Words

Page 3: Grammar book

Nationalities

Page 4: Grammar book

Stem Changers

• No stem changing in the nosotros or vosotros!

• Different kinds of stem changers:

• O>ue

• U>ue

• E>I

• E>ie

• Examples:

• O>ue/D(o)rmir> D(ue)rmo

• E>ie/P(e)nsar> p(ie)nsas

• E>i/P(e)dir> P(i)do

• U>ue/ J(u)gar> J(ue)go

Page 5: Grammar book

Para

• Para-for

• I ate meat for dinner

• Yo como carne para cena

Page 6: Grammar book

Indirect Object Pronouns

0 Placement:

0 Before a conjugated verb

0 Attach to an infinitive

0 Attach to a gerund/’ing’

0 Example: le, te, me, nos, les.

0 Whoever is reveiving the action is how you conjugate it.

0 Example: Pedro gives a ring to me; Pedre me da el arreta a mi.

Page 7: Grammar book

Pronoun Placement

0 When the pronoun accompanies a conjugated verb, the pronoun comes before the verb

0 Rosa le compra una olla a su madro

0 But when the pronoun accompanies a sentence with an infinitive, it can either go before the verb or attached to the end of the infinitive

0 Rosa quiere comprarle una olla a su madre.

Page 8: Grammar book

Not a stem changer

Indirect object pronoun is always with it

Usually preceeds the verb

Whatever is being “gusta’d” is how you write the ending

• For example:

• Me gustas tu.

• Le gusta el pan

• Le gusto me.

In some cases:

• ‘no’ goes before the I.O.P. and the verb

Gustar

Page 9: Grammar book

Affirmative & Negative Words

Affirmative: algo(something), alguien(someone), algun/alguno(a)(same), siempre(always), tambien(also)

Negative: nada(nothing), nadie(noone), ningun/ninguno(a)(none), nunca(never), tampoco(neither)

Page 10: Grammar book

Los Superlativos

Equivalent to ‘very’ or ‘extremely’

Suffix:

Isimo, isimos, isima, isimas

Malo>malisimo

Muchas>muchisimas

Dificil>dificilismo

Adjectives and adverbs ending in c, g, or z change spelkling to qu, gu, and c respectively

Rico>riquisimo

Larga>larguisima

Feliz>felicisimo

Adjectives that end in ‘n’ ot ‘r’ form by adding ‘cisimo/a

Joven>jovencisimo

Trabajdor>trabajadorcisimo

Page 11: Grammar book

Affirmative tu commands/irregulars/pronoun placement Drop the ‘s’

Example:

Hablo>habla.

You can attach the pronoun to the command.

Example:

Play the guitar: tocala (since guitar is guitara, you add the ‘la’ to the end of the command.)

Sing the song/to me: cantala/cantamela(the pronoun goes before the en==ending of whatever you are talking about.)

Irregulars:

Dar/decir : no des/digas

ir: no vayas

Ser: no seas

Hacer: no hagas

Estar: no estes

Saber: no sepas

Tener: no tengas

Venir: no vengas

Page 12: Grammar book

Negative tu commands

Put in the yo form

Change to opposite vowel (ar>er/ir, er/ir>ar)

Add ‘s’

Example:

Habla

Hables (you change it to the yo form, and since it is an ar verb you change it to e, and then add an ‘s’)

Page 13: Grammar book

Reflexives

What you are doing to yourself…it reflects back onto you.

I wash my teeth-I am washing myself so it’s reflexive because I am doing it to myself.

Me, te, le, nos, os, se.

Me duermo

Se duermen

Nos dormimos

Os dormimis

Le duerme

te duermes

Page 14: Grammar book

Sequencing events

Primer-first

Entonces- then

Despues- after

Luego- later

Por fin- finally

Por la manana/tarde/noche- in the…/during the…