they conjugated them with the pictures so you learn to distinguish between sexes. very rarely do you say "que hacer" in its infinitive when speaking to a person so um menino bebendo and uma menina bebenda for example, is used within the system
@chrispecker the verbs they were using had "ndo" as the conjugation, so a better translation for "nadando", "cozinhando" and "bebendo" would be: "swimming", "cooking", "drinking" etc.. The verb "to swim", "to cook" and "to drink" would use the infinitive form of the verb, so they would be "nadar", "cozinhar" and "beber".
depends on the word. for instance, nadando would be the verb "to swim". menino would be noun "boy", menina, "girl". in the higher lessons they start to piece vocabulary together into complex sentences
they conjugated them with the pictures so you learn to distinguish between sexes. very rarely do you say "que hacer" in its infinitive when speaking to a person so um menino bebendo and uma menina bebenda for example, is used within the system
chrispecker 1 year ago
@chrispecker the verbs they were using had "ndo" as the conjugation, so a better translation for "nadando", "cozinhando" and "bebendo" would be: "swimming", "cooking", "drinking" etc.. The verb "to swim", "to cook" and "to drink" would use the infinitive form of the verb, so they would be "nadar", "cozinhar" and "beber".
canufeelbass 1 year ago
thank you for posting this! Keep posting more lessons please! :)
HamptonDoll 1 year ago
@HamptonDoll thank you, and I will now that the work year is starting up again.
chrispecker 1 year ago
depends on the word. for instance, nadando would be the verb "to swim". menino would be noun "boy", menina, "girl". in the higher lessons they start to piece vocabulary together into complex sentences
chrispecker 2 years ago
But what are the words describing?
Drewd1982 2 years ago