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12-05-2021, 09:47 PM
(This post was last modified: 12-05-2021, 09:53 PM by Cole22.)
I'm working on the Spanish and for some reason my Spanish dictionary is not matching up to the vocabulary words that are not listed. For example "The Wall" in my dictionary says "la muro," which of course the site wants "la pared."
Any recommendations on a website to use?
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(12-05-2021, 09:47 PM)Cole22 Wrote: I'm working on the Spanish and for some reason my Spanish dictionary is not matching up to the vocabulary words that are not listed. For example "The Wall" in my dictionary says "la muro," which of course the site wants "la pared."
Any recommendations on a website to use?
Do Google translate, and you'll see that car is coche in Spanish.
Now try saying that to someone in the Americas.
"Dónde está el coche?"
"Coche? do you see a carriage in this parking lot? This isn't Cinderella."
Coche means car in Span, but not in the Americas.
I would just use the words they provide in Instantcert even if they are wrong, and upload them to Quizlet to practice.
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If it helps any, this is not an issue exclusive to Spanish. In German, there are at least two words for "wall": die Wand and die Mauer. Different learning programs tend to use one or the other without further explanation. What they don't tell you is that the words are not exactly equivalent. One is (mostly) for interior room walls, the other is (mostly) for exterior walls or fences. It can be confusing to a beginner.
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(12-05-2021, 09:47 PM)Cole22 Wrote: I'm working on the Spanish and for some reason my Spanish dictionary is not matching up to the vocabulary words that are not listed. For example "The Wall" in my dictionary says "la muro," which of course the site wants "la pared."
Any recommendations on a website to use? El muro and the la pared. Muro=wall usually extetior and thicket, pared= interior wall, part of a room, usually thin.
Spanish have a lot of localizations,. The best option usually is to learn the vocabulary as the course present it. Im native spraker and see a lot of very diferent uses of words in usa. Just learn the way that is necessary to pass the exam.
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12-18-2021, 05:23 PM
(This post was last modified: 12-18-2021, 09:46 PM by Cole22.)
Just my opinion, from someone who took the Spanish exam a couple of weeks ago. I did not care for the IC Spansh course and I would not recommend it to folks who are new to Spanish. I preferred the ACTFL exam. I didn’t feel the IC course prepared you for the final. With ACTFL, you can choose whether you want to focus on reading or speaking. The Spanish reading course was quite simple compared to the IC final. The IC final had audio, reading and correct word tenses. The audio has recorded paragraphs in Spanish and you need to answer questions afterwards. If you’re new to Spanish like me, it’s very difficult as they speak very fast, and the audio starts immediately when you hit "Next" from the previous question. The IC final tests is listening, reading and correct noun and verb tenses. It takes time for it to be reviewed and graded and results/badges can take a few weeks. While I was waiting for my IC final results and badge, I decided to take the ACTFL Spanish. The ACTFL Spanish reading exam focuses just on the reading and answering basic questions. I used the ModernStates course to study from. I don’t believe the IC course prepares you for the audio portion of the final, and spends more time on culture, that’s not needed in the final. ACTFL is graded within seconds and badges issued at the same time. The ACTFL is a live proctored exam, and it was very simple to use the software I also completed the French reading exam and I’m now working on the Italian one, for my own personal goal. Just my opinion here as a person that is just looking to check the box on a foreign language credit.
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12-18-2021, 07:52 PM
(This post was last modified: 12-18-2021, 09:48 PM by Cole22.)
duplicate entry
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ACTFL has a Spanish reading course? I thought they just had exams.
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Just exams. I used Mountain States and other free resources online.
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(08-24-2020, 08:30 PM)OldManOfTheSea Wrote: (08-24-2020, 01:02 PM)ss20ts Wrote: Is there an oral assignment or test in this class?
Hey ss20ts!
There are no oral assignments or tests for this course. Check out the details and the syllabus:
https://www.instantcert.com/credit_courses/Spanish-I
OldManOfTheSea The Syllabus seems to have a series of multiple choice exams, but the comments here make it sould like you need a international keyboard. Are the chapters and exams not multiple choice then?
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I'm doing this course now. I think I'm on lesson 17. Thought's so far : I've copy /pasted each lesson for reference when taking the quizzes. This sort of forces things to stick....constantly looking back on lessons and notes especially. It's a pretty good course so far but is a tad disjointed. In the quizzes you'll run across questions that have words that haven't really been explained and sentence structure that hasn't been taught. Example: In English we would spell out you, to, ....... but in Spanish, it's often part of one of the words, like it's implied. Out of curiosity I used a google translator for a sentence and it was worded differently than what the quiz wanted. If someone has had zero Spanish exposure, this course would be confusing even if they studied for a while. The vocabulary/grammar is good. That can be studied and referenced. All the rules for conjugating and such are confusing . There were two words in a grammar question that used " wish to" ( desear) and "climb" ( subir) in the same sentence. Going by the lesson "desear" would be changed because it ends in ar and subir would be changed because it ends in ir, but....that wasn't the case. I mean, it gave me the answer they wanted and the why, but it didn't make sense in the moment. The are so many rules to absorb. It seems it would be better if it was more about conversational Spanish than all of the rules .... ed2go has conversational Spanish in the work place and it was easier to absorb in my opinion. I'll finish because I need this course and hope that I can pass the final......but don't know if it should be someone's first intro to Spanish.
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