A Complete Guide To Every Fundamental In Spanish (The Conclusion)

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This video is a long compilation of all of my previous videos that show and explain each Spanish concept individually. I decided to put all of this information in one video, so that way, there’s no need to search for each Spanish concept on its own. This video has every Spanish concept, idea, principle, and fundamental that one would need to understand the basis of Spanish. The only missing concepts are verbs like “gustar” and the difference between “qué” and “cuál.” I decided to not include them because they’re simple enough to understand.

I begin the video with a short introduction as to what this long video brings and conclude it with the idea that I mention all the time: Regardless of the reason for learning languages, everyone has to start with the basis of the language, and that’s exactly what I’ve shown in the video. Thank you all for watching these videos; it makes me feel very contented knowing that I’m educating some people. Big thank you for your support, really.

Feel free to share this video with people you know who love learning languages or with people in general. I very much appreciate the support.

Here are the timestamps for each Spanish concept; that way you don’t have to waste time looking for the concept you need in the video:
(0:00) - The Introduction
(1:04) - Spanish Fundamentals
(10:32) - Conjugating Verbs (Present)
(16:23) - Articles
(18:54) - The Verb “Ser”
(23:19) - The Present Progressive
(26:08) - The Verb “Estar”
(32:28) - Descriptive Adjectives
(35:52) - Possessive Adjectives
(38:32) - Demonstrative Adjectives
(40:50) - Useful Greetings & Farewells
(43:53) - The Verb “Poder”
(47:03) - The Verb “Ir”
(52:38) - The Verb “Tener”
(59:03) - “al” & “del”
(1:00:34) - Prepositional Pronouns
(1:03:26) - Direct Object Pronouns
(1:09:18) - Indirect Object Pronouns
(1:16:10) - Combining DOPs & IOPs
(1:23:54) - The Verb “Gustar”
(1:29:48) - Irregular “Yo” Verbs
(1:32:59) - Stem-Changing Verbs
(1:36:52) - The Verb “Saber”
(1:39:51) - The Verb “Conocer”
(1:43:05) - Past Tense For Regular Verbs
(1:48:08) - Past Tense of “Ser” and “Ir”
(1:54:32) - Irregular Verbs in the Past - Part 1
(2:01:56) - Irregular Verbs in the Past - Part 2
(2:09:40) - Reflexive Verbs
(2:15:49) - Reciprocal Reflexive Verbs
(2:18:31) - Imperfect Tense
(2:25:22) - Stressed Possessive Adjectives
(2:27:59) - “Por” & “Para”
(2:34:12) - Comparatives & Superlatives
(2:39:27) - How Negatives Work
(2:43:50) - Familiar Tú Commands
(2:50:50) - Nosotros Commands
(2:57:26) - Past Participles As Adjectives
(3:01:52) - Present Perfect Tense
(3:06:10) - Past Perfect Tense
(3:09:41) - Future Tense
(3:14:07) - Future Perfect Tense
(3:16:45) - Conditional Tense
(3:20:51) - Conditional Perfect Tense
(3:22:48) - “Que” & “Lo que”
(3:27:32) - Understanding the Subjunctive
(3:35:21) - Verbs in the Present Subjunctive
(3:44:33) - Examples in the Present Subjunctive
(3:51:07) - Past Subjunctive
(3:58:33) - Present Perfect Subjunctive
(4:02:29) - Past Perfect Subjunctive
(4:05:30) - The Conclusion

Here are some minor mistakes I noticed later when editing (there may be more, sorry for that):
(8:37) - Instead of "deicineuve," it should be "diecinueve"
(2:37:29) - Instead of “the most/less,” it should be “the most/least”
(3:58:06) - Instead of “una casa buena,” it should be “una mala noche”
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This video is absolutely phenomenal but I have to pause after every five minutes and clear my head, because it feels like I’m running a mental marathon!

marchyman
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as a new Spanish beginner learner, I am absolutely lucky to find this video

aliaxx
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This summarize 10 years of Spanish leaning, bravo 🙌

cathypalm
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i dont think people understand how good this video is. This is the best video in existence for learning spanish right now.

YoullNeverCompare
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A message for the intermediate learners:

You have stumbled upon your best new reference video for Spanish. Aside from the usual listening podcasts (Slow News, Chill Spanish Listening, etc.), speaking practice a la Tandem, etc. (a must), and daily reading (do it!), this video is the only reference you will ever need. Why?

Because the intermediate threshold is where your Spanish isn’t perfect, BUT you can know what it is you need to learn, even without a teacher. With this video, you can now teach yourself, build sentences, and practice speaking with your language partners. You’ll make mistakes, understand the nuances of the language, and revisit this video as needed. 

Of course, you’ll find helpful tips and advice in other videos (and you should use them as needed to further understand the concepts), but the creator of this video accomplished the singular task of stripping out all the unnecessary fat from the information, providing you with a virtual audio/visual dictionary of Spanish concepts. This video is a GOLD MINE of daily lessons.

So, start from the beginning, practice making sentences with every topic, and when you find difficulty in a particular topic, spend a few days there. Ride that pause button. Don’t get overwhelmed by the speed - it’s a feature, not a bug. Rewatch troubling topics over and over while using your other tools (see the first paragraph), and NEVER GIVE UP.

Thank you to the creator. We owe you one.

InspiretheStory
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I'm a spanish speaker and this video is useful for me as well 😂😂😂😂😂 to learn English.

topcommentchangesthemap
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One correction (i'm a spanish speaker):

Conduzco, traduzco and conozco are not irregular conjugations of conducir, traducir and concer.

It happens to ALL of the regular verb that end in -cir or -cer

Nacer Nazco
Crecer Crezco
Parecer Parezco
Carecer Carezco
Reducir Reduzco
Producir Produzco
Merecer Merezco
Aparecer Aparezco
Envejecer Envejezco
Abastecer Abastezco

It's not that they're irregular, that's just another rule

elcanaldelucas
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I changed the playback speed to 0.75 and it is perfect, gives time to think and reflect and jot down without feeling frustrated. This is a great, high-yield video.

vllbgtr
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Just finished watching the 4-hour, and I can read and understand a lot of Spanish now. Incredible! Thank you for the amazing video. Looking forward to your A Complete Guide To Every Fundamental In German.

stephenchan
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I went from 0 to conversationally fluent in 3 months. Great video, very well made.

amayo
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I want this type of video for every language ever!

onethreed
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As a Spanish student myself with many beginner courses having been taken to solidify my understanding of the basic fundamentals, this is VERY well put together. Highly recommended that you watch this video to learn spanish- because this is the content that we learn in spanish class, with the BS cut out.

JackxFuego
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This video is AMAZING!!! But we MUST address a small mistake: “infinitives” are NOT -ando -iendo words; that’s the present progressive tense! Infinitives are the most basic form of a word: to eat, to write, comer, escribir

josephvalentine
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You are an excellent teacher! But about 30:23... In Spanish is very common to say "soy feliz ". Native speakers will understand the following:

Soy feliz = normally, in general I am happy (let's forget the bad times).

Estoy feliz = for the moment, I feel happy now, after having had a bad time, or without taking into account whether tomorrow I will still be just as happy

octavioarenas
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Great guide, I just wanted to point out 3 things:
1. As far as I know "vosotros" is only used in Spain. In Latin America we don't use "vosotros" at all, we use "ustedes" for you in plural regardless of if we are speaking formally or informally. So if you go with "vosotros" or "ustedes" just depends on which variant you would like to speak. If you decide to use "ustedes", then just need to remember that the conjugation for verbs for "ustedes" is the same that is used for "ellos". For example, "y'all eat a lot" would be "ustedes comen mucho".
2. The amount of times that we use "nosotros", "ustedes/vosotros" and "ellos" is about the same as in English for "we", "y'all" and "they", so it is important to remember well the right conjugation for those pronouns.
3. I don't think I've ever heard in any variant someone say "segunda" and "minuta" to mean "second" and "minute". I recommend you to use "segundo" and "minuto" in masculine.

HOrtiz-pjgt
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THIS IS GENUINELY AN AMAZING VIDEO im only an hour in but ive retained so many notes and information 😭 thank u for helping a mexican who can fluently understand spanish but cant speak it bc of grammar 😍

chlamy
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I'm an intermediate Spanish learner, Id say I'm around low B2. Ive been learning since I was in middle school (10 years) but I just started self studying and immersion. I plan to use this video over the next few weeks and I'm hoping with immersion, itll be enough to push me to C1. Good luck and happy language learning everyone ! 🎉

PoliSciPrincess
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4:00
5:00
5:30 | Prepositions and Adverbs |
6:08 |Adverbs|
6:29 | Pronouns |
7:23 | Days of the week |
7:40 |Months|
7:53 |Seasons|
7:58 | Time words |
8:39 | Numbers |
9:36 | Numbers ( Position ) |

yrew
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AND there's time stamps? This video is truly a gift from God 🙏

autumnleaves
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I'm a native Spanish and fluent in English. I guess I came across this video since I am currently studying Japanese, and I'm having a pretty rough time with it, but when I found this video I couldn't avoid looking at how interestingly similar this seems like to how I'm learning Japanese. Helps so much with motivation to think that, since Spanish is not impossible to learn, Japanese shouldn't be neither!

I've never had an experience like this one before, since I never really studied for English, just consumed a bunch of native content until I eventually became fluent somehow, took a long time tho (5 YEARS) but even with that much time, it was only possible because of how relatively "easy" it is to learn English as a Spanish native speaker, but trying to do the same thing with Japanese would be, straight up, borderline imposible, so I got forced to actually study for this one. It is nice to see videos like this one sometimes! Luck with you guys Spanish journey too! It's even tough for most natives, super cool to know there's actual people learning it 😅

deowi