Lesson Notes
Unlock In-Depth Explanations & Exclusive Takeaways with Printable Lesson Notes
Unlock Lesson Notes and Transcripts for every single lesson. Sign Up for a Free Lifetime Account and Get 7 Days of Premium Access.
Learn how to talk about the weather
Unlock Lesson Notes and Transcripts for every single lesson. Sign Up for a Free Lifetime Account and Get 7 Days of Premium Access.
Let's look at some more examples. |
Listen and repeat or speak along with the native speakers. |
Está lloviendo. |
Está lloviendo. |
Está nevando. |
Está nevando. |
Está soleado. |
Está soleado. |
Está nublado. |
Está nublado. |
Está húmedo en Veracruz. |
Está húmedo en Veracruz. |
Did you notice how I added the location in this last sentence? |
Víctor Trejo: Está húmedo en Veracruz. |
"It’s humid in Veracruz." |
First is Está, "It’s." Está. |
Next is húmedo, “humid.” Húmedo (enunciated). Húmedo. |
After this is en Veracruz, "in Veracruz." En Veracruz. |
First is en, meaning "in." En (enunciated). En. |
Next is the location, in this case, Veracruz (enunciated). Veracruz. |
All together, it's Está húmedo en Veracruz. "It's humid in Veracruz." |
The pattern is |
Está WEATHER CONDITION + en LOCATION. |
To use this pattern, simply replace the WEATHER CONDITION placeholder with a suitable weather condition, and the LOCATION placeholder with your current location. |
Note, this pattern requires an adjective for the weather condition and the name of a city, village or town. |
You should be aware of this pattern, but for this lesson, we won't use locations. |
Comments
Hide