Let's take a closer look at the conversation. |
Do you remember how Silvia asks, |
"Is this your family?" |
Silvia Ramírez Arce: ¿Es tu familia? |
Let's start with the word familia, "family." Familia (enunciated). Familia. |
In Spanish, all nouns have grammatical gender and are either singular or plural. Familia is feminine and singular — a fact that determines the form of other words in the sentence. |
Before familia, is tu, "your." Tu (enunciated). Tu. |
Together, tu familia, "your family." Tu familia. |
Moving to the start of the sentence, es, "is." Es (enunciated). Es. |
Es comes from the verb, ser, meaning "to be." |
All together, it's ¿Es tu familia? This literally means "Is your family?" But it translates as "Is [this] your family?" |
Note "this" is understood from context. |
Also, note the rising intonation of the sentence to indicate that it's a question. |
Silvia Ramirez (@college-friendf): ¿Es tu familia? |
Remember this question. You'll hear it again later. |
Let's take a closer look at the response. |
Do you remember how Ben says, |
"Yes. My father, my mother, my sister, and me." |
Sí. Mi papá, mi mamá, mi hermana y yo. |
First is the expression, sí, meaning "yes." Sí (enunciated). Sí. |
It answers Silvia's yes-or-no question, "Is this your family?" |
¿Es tu familia? |
After this, Ben points to the picture and says, |
Mi papá, mi mamá, mi hermana y yo. |
First is Mi papá. "My father." Mi papá. |
Mi. "My." Mi (enunciated). Mi. |
Papá. "Father." Papá (enunciated). Papá. |
Together, it's mi papá. "My father." Mi papá. |
Next is Mamá. "Mother." Mamá (enunciated). Mamá. |
Mi mamá. "My mother." Mi mamá. |
After this is Hermana. "Sister." Hermana (enunciated). Hermana. |
Mi hermana. "My sister." Mi hermana. |
Next is y. "And." Y (enunciated). Y. |
Last is yo, which translates as "me" in this context. Yo (enunciated). Yo. |
All together, it's Mi papá, mi mamá, mi hermana y yo. |
"My father, my mother, my sister, and me." |
Mi papá, mi mamá, mi hermana y yo. |
The pattern is |
Mi {FAMILY MEMBER}, mi {FAMILY MEMBER}, mi {FAMILY MEMBER} y yo. |
"My {FAMILY MEMBER}, my {FAMILY MEMBER}, my {FAMILY MEMBER}, and me." |
To use this pattern, simply replace the {FAMILY MEMBER} placeholder with the members of your family. |
Imagine your family members are your father, your mother, your brother, and you. |
Hermano. "Brother." Hermano (enunciated). Hermano. |
Say |
"My father, my mother, my brother, and me." |
Sasha Lee: Mi papá, mi mamá, mi hermano y yo. |
Sasha Lee: "My father, my mother, my brother, and me." |
Sasha Lee: Mi papá, mi mamá, mi hermano y yo. |
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