North and South American Countries in Spanish | The Language Tutor *Lesson 83*

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This Lesson is the first of a series of videos teaching how to say countries in Spanish. Lesson 83 will focus on North and South American countries.

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Muchas Gracias! You deserve to be known around the world, Greetings from Italy🇮🇹

saniwashere-RV
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Yayyy new lesson! ¡Muchas gracias Profesor Danny!❤️❤️

keziahjofressel
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Hi professor Danny 😳
I love your videos really helpful with my class

kat
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Hey Danny
Hope you will bring more such videos in future .
Love the way you teach❤️❤️❤️.
Helps a lot

sachinthakur
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Muchas gracias! This is helping me prep for a test en epanol manana!

mspaulajackman
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Sir u r doing so much hardwork
May ur efforts bore fruits 🍎😊

Simar_Sandhu
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Gracias, much appreciation for your efforts

surthiang
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Request: Preterate vs Imperfect tense. This of course would not be your first visit to this topic. You talked about it when you first introduced the imperfect tense. It would add to your series to have another more advanced video on this topic.

If you wanted to dig really deep into the topic you could explain something I have been wondering about. You could go back to the classical origins of spanish in latin. Apparently proper classical latin had no simple past. That was only the Greeks that had a simple past. I have not gotten this figured out completely. Latin with out a simple past lacked the (don't count on spelling) arist form. They had congugstions for the present perfect and past perfect in latin So in the vulgar language spoken by slaves were they introducing Greek ideas into the language?

I have even discovered that classical latin did not have the letter Y in its alphabet until it was introduced to import Greek words into the language.

Hence caesar would have said "ego" instead of "yo".

ericbaugher
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will i be able to express my self in spanish with these videos

wesup
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Hi Evan, could you add country adj. such as Japanese food, and language they speak.

commonsensewisdom
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Dr. Evans.
saludos.
yo comienzé estudiar español des de dieciseis del marzo esta año. porque yo soy siempre en la lcasa, porque de corona virus.
tengo una pregunta por usted.
¿cómo puedo le escribir una carta?
en otra cosas, qué es su dirección.
muchas gracias por enseñarme.
Tú manera de eseñar es muy facil.
yo lo gusto mucho.
This is unedited just to show you my progress

girmaytinsaye
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hey, can you do more countries especially asian countries, please?

Asakyoshi
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There are other countries/territories in the Americas that were not mentioned in the video:
Puerto Rico: puertorriqueño
Bermudas: bermudeño
Trinidad y Tobago: trinitense
Barbados: barbadense
Santa Lucía: santalucense
Granada: granadense
Dominica: dominiqués
San Cristóbal y Nieves: sancristobaleño
San Vicente y las Granadinas: sanvicentino
Antigua y Barbuda: antiguobarbudense
Aruba: arubano
Curazao: curazoleño
San Martín (norte y sur): sanmartinense

Greetings

doimonmarkanpat
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Hello, I really do not want to offend you somehow but I am very discombobulated by your pronunciation of "l" which you pronounce in some cases as "r" f.i. El Salvador X El Sarvador (3:24). I was taught that some of Asian inhabitants are not able distinguish these two sounds but I never ever heard it from anybody else. Do you pronounce it this way intentionally? Sorry to bother you with that my question.

JINDRICH
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Americano and Mexicano are real?? I assume that Spanish is difficult

suhyun.choi
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Thin and thick gold chains are all mine…. I love gold and jewelry

suhyun.choi
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Ahora yo estoy esudiando el lección *50*

girmaytinsaye
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Guyana se dice con U gUyana, vos decís gayana, lo cual es un error

TheYacare
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You have a little anime hair in this video, LOL.

christianemckelvey