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7.25: Introduction to En la casa

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    50216
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    a houseIn this section you will learn about the household using the verb estar with prepositions of place.

    Prepositions are relation words; they can indicate location, time, or other more abstract relationships. “Under,” “over,” “in,” “on,” and “behind” are all prepositions of place. Follow this link to learn more about prepositions (in English).

    In Unidad 1 you briefly learned the verb estar in questions like “¿Cómo estás?” to ask “How are you?”. In this unit we will use the verb to describe the location of things in a household and further conjugate the verb. Something very important that seems to always get left out are the “tildes” or diacritical marks in Spanish. You may have noticed that unlike English, Spanish has a variety of accent marks for their vowels (á, é, í, ó, ú, ü) and one for the ñ. Accent marks are important for pronunciation as well as distinguishing the meaning of one word from another. You will notice when we conjugate estar there is always an accent mark on the “a” except for the nosotros form, and this reflects the different pronunciation of the conjugated verb, as opposed to the word “this.” For example: Marta está aquí. (Marta is here.) Esta es Marta. (This is Marta). As you can see these words look the same but a single “tilde” changes the entire meaning from the verb “is” to “this.” Here are some other words that change meaning when you do not include an accent mark:

    • Aun= even/ aún = yet
    • El = the/ él = he
    • Mas = but/ más = more
    • Mi = my/ mí = me
    • Si = if / sí = yes
    • Tu = your/ tú = you

    Objetivos

    By the end of this section you will be able to:

    • Use the verb estar and the vocabulary of rooms and furniture to discuss where people and things are located

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