Read Madrigals Magic Key to Spanish Online
Authors: Margarita Madrigal
Tags: #Reference, #Language Arts & Disciplines
1 | 2 | 3 |
¿ Invitó usted a | su mamá | al teatro |
Invité a | mi mamá | al cine |
No invité a | su papá | a la fiesta |
| mi papá | a la clase |
| un amigo | a mi casa |
| Roberto | esta mañana |
| | esta tarde |
| | esta noche |
B
1 | 2 | 3 |
¿ Visité usted a | Roberto | esta mañana |
Visité a | su mamá | esta tarde |
No visité a | mi papá | esta noche |
Translate the following sentences into Spanish. Write out each sentence in Spanish, using the columns above as a guide. After
you have written out all the sentences check with the correct translations below this exercise.
Check your sentences with the correct translations below.
In Spanish we do not say “Visité
a el
doctor”; instead, we say “Visité
al
doctor.” The word “al” is a contraction of “a” and “el.”
EXAMPLES
:
Visité al doctor. | Visité al dentista. |
Visité al novelista. | Invité al profesor a la fiesta. |
Copy the material that is shown on the sample below onto a card. Carry the card with you and glance at it whenever you get a chance.
¿ Invitó usted a | su mamá | al teatro |
( Did you invite? ) | mi mamá | al cine |
| su papá | a la fiesta |
No invité a | mi papá | a la clase |
( I didn’t invite ) | un amigo | a mi casa |
| Roberto | esta mañana |
Invité a | | esta tarde |
( I invited ) | | esta noche |
| | anoche |
| | ( last night ) |
N
OTE
: “Mamá” and “papá” are informal words like
“mom”
and
“dad.”
“Madre” (
mother
) and “padre” (
father
) are more formal.
You can convert many English words that end in “ry” into Spanish words by changing the “ry” to “rio.”
RY = RIO
the canary
= el canario
adversario | emisario |
aniversario | extraordinario |
canario | fragmentario |
comentario | glosario |
( comment ) | ( glossary ) |
contrario | hereditario |
culinario | imaginario |
diario | incendiario |
( diary, daily ) | involuntario |
diccionario | itinerario |
dignitario | laboratorio |
disciplinary | literario |
mercenario | salario |
monetario | secretario |
necesario | secundario |
( necessary ) | seminario |
notario | solitario |
obituario | sumario |
ordinario | suplementario |
parlamentario | temporario |
primario | tributario |
reaccionario | veterinario |
revolucionario | visionario |
rosario | voluntario |
Some of the above words may be made feminine simply by changing the final “o” to “a.”
EXAMPLES
:
el secretario (masc.), la secretaria (fem.)
You can convert some English words that end in “em,” “am,” “om” into Spanish words by adding the letter “a.”
el programa | el diagrama | el sistema | el emblema |
el telegrama | el epigrama | el poema | el idioma |
el cablegrama | el monograma | el problema | ( the language ) |
Some words that end in “ma” are alike in English and Spanish: el drama, el panorama, el dilema.
“El clima” means “the climate.”
el teléfono
ou have already learned that if you are speaking of yourself you must end the verb in “é.”
EXAMPLES : | preparé, I prepared tomé, I took visité, I visited invité, I invited |
When speaking of anybody but yourself (singular), you must end verbs in the letter “ó.”
EXAMPLES
:
Roberto preparó la lección.
Robert prepared the lesson.
El doctor tomó un taxi.
The doctor took a taxi.
El general visitó al presidente.
The general visited the president.
¿ Preparó usted la cena?
Did you prepare dinner?
Remember, then, that if you speak of yourself you must end the verb in “é” and if you speak of anyone else (singular) you must end the verb in “ó.” This is easy to remember if you say a kind of jingle to yourself: “É for me, Ó for others.”
In order to help you connect the letter “ó” with everything and everybody in the world (except yourself), I have devised a figure which I call the third man. Every time the third man appears before a verb, you can be sure that the verb must certainly end in the letter “ó.”
Allow me to present the third man:
The third man is really the figure of a sleeping man wearing a sombrero. The figure has been drawn in the shape of a number 3 and will appear in the rest of the lessons like this:
.
The third man is a versatile fellow. He represents EVERYTHING and EVERYBODY in the world except you. When speaking of a star, a flower, a table, Julius Caesar, or your Aunt Sarah you must use the third man form, that is, you must end the verb in the letter “ó.”
You already know hundreds and hundreds of verbs in English that are also Spanish verbs if you change them very slightly.
“Visité” and “invité” are like the English verbs “visited” and “invited” with the letter “d” dropped. There are a great many verbs in English that can be changed into Spanish in the same way.
Following is a list of these verbs that you can learn virtually at a glance. Notice the little drawing of the third man before every third man form below.
FIRST PERSON | THIRD MAN FORM |
usé, I used | usó, you, he, she used |
voté, I voted | votó, you, he, she voted |
inventé, I invented | inventó, you, he, she invented |
importé, I imported | importó, you, he, she imported |
copié, I copied | copió, you, he, she copied |
curé, I cured | curé, you, he, she cured |
examiné, I examined | examinó, you, he, she examined |
noté, I noted, noticed | notó, you, he, she noted, noticed |
presenté, I presented | presentó, you, he, she presented |
comparé, I compared | comparó, you, he, she compared |
combiné, I combined | combinó, you, he, she combined |
causé, I caused | causó, you, he, she caused |
deposité, I deposited | depositó, you, he, she deposited |