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Tips 099: Transitive vs Intransitive Verbs In Spanish

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Manage episode 185453693 series 1517603
Content provided by Andrew Barr: Spanish Student. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Andrew Barr: Spanish Student or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

train
The good thing about transitive and intransitive verbs in Spanish is most English students tend to get them right when guessing.

The bad thing is we don’t really learn about this idea in school. But, it helps if you want to understand certain phrases and grammar structures in Spanish. And of course, there is the odd exception to the rule.

Verbs in English can be grouped into transitive only, intransitive only or both. There are some verbs like “to have” that are transitive only, verbs like “to go” that are intransitive only and verbs like “to read” than can be both transitive and intransitive depending on the sentence.

In general, when you translate from English to Spanish, the verbs that are transitive only are still transitive only and similarly with intransitive and the verbs that are both. The challenge is the few rare exceptions. But, in most cases you want need to remember these.

Listen to today’s podcast to learn how to use transitive and intransitive verbs in Spanish. And if you have any questions, you can leave them below.

This month you can access the Real Fast Spanish School training platform. In the school you will be able to access every course at Real Fast Spanish all in one place. You will now be able to access a complete structured set of training designed to help you reach a conversation level of Spanish using the principles of conversation hacking. You can sign up for the school here: Real Fast Spanish School.

Examples from the episode:

I have a new car – Tengo un coche nuevo.

I have a girlfriend – Tengo una novia.

I want world peace – Quiero la paz mundial.

I want to travel – Quiero viajar.

I love you a lot – Te quiero mucho.

I go to school – Voy a la escuela.

I arrive late – Llego tarde.

I arrive early – Llego pronto.

I arrived late to the concert – Llegué tarde al concierto.

I read a lot – Leo mucho.

I read slowly – Leo despacio.

I’m reading this book – Estoy leyendo este libro.

She practices often – Ella practica a menudo.

She practices her Spanish – Ell practica su Español.

I slept for an hour – Dormí durante una hora.

In english you can’t sleep something.

He put his kids to bed – Él durmió a sus niños a la cama.

What other Spanish transitive or intransitive verbs do you know?

The post Tips 099: Transitive vs Intransitive Verbs In Spanish appeared first on Real Fast Spanish.

  continue reading

116 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 

Archived series ("HTTP Redirect" status)

Replaced by: www.realfastspanish.com

When? This feed was archived on August 30, 2017 20:42 (7y ago). Last successful fetch was on August 25, 2017 09:32 (7y ago)

Why? HTTP Redirect status. The feed permanently redirected to another series.

What now? If you were subscribed to this series when it was replaced, you will now be subscribed to the replacement series. This series will no longer be checked for updates. If you believe this to be in error, please check if the publisher's feed link below is valid and contact support to request the feed be restored or if you have any other concerns about this.

Manage episode 185453693 series 1517603
Content provided by Andrew Barr: Spanish Student. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Andrew Barr: Spanish Student or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

train
The good thing about transitive and intransitive verbs in Spanish is most English students tend to get them right when guessing.

The bad thing is we don’t really learn about this idea in school. But, it helps if you want to understand certain phrases and grammar structures in Spanish. And of course, there is the odd exception to the rule.

Verbs in English can be grouped into transitive only, intransitive only or both. There are some verbs like “to have” that are transitive only, verbs like “to go” that are intransitive only and verbs like “to read” than can be both transitive and intransitive depending on the sentence.

In general, when you translate from English to Spanish, the verbs that are transitive only are still transitive only and similarly with intransitive and the verbs that are both. The challenge is the few rare exceptions. But, in most cases you want need to remember these.

Listen to today’s podcast to learn how to use transitive and intransitive verbs in Spanish. And if you have any questions, you can leave them below.

This month you can access the Real Fast Spanish School training platform. In the school you will be able to access every course at Real Fast Spanish all in one place. You will now be able to access a complete structured set of training designed to help you reach a conversation level of Spanish using the principles of conversation hacking. You can sign up for the school here: Real Fast Spanish School.

Examples from the episode:

I have a new car – Tengo un coche nuevo.

I have a girlfriend – Tengo una novia.

I want world peace – Quiero la paz mundial.

I want to travel – Quiero viajar.

I love you a lot – Te quiero mucho.

I go to school – Voy a la escuela.

I arrive late – Llego tarde.

I arrive early – Llego pronto.

I arrived late to the concert – Llegué tarde al concierto.

I read a lot – Leo mucho.

I read slowly – Leo despacio.

I’m reading this book – Estoy leyendo este libro.

She practices often – Ella practica a menudo.

She practices her Spanish – Ell practica su Español.

I slept for an hour – Dormí durante una hora.

In english you can’t sleep something.

He put his kids to bed – Él durmió a sus niños a la cama.

What other Spanish transitive or intransitive verbs do you know?

The post Tips 099: Transitive vs Intransitive Verbs In Spanish appeared first on Real Fast Spanish.

  continue reading

116 episodes

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