Sleeping with some light (the blinds not shut completely) was a cause for me, along with stress. No light, not able to see anything waking up, no eldritch horrors in the room and I probably fall asleep again.
Plant, pottery and tech enthusiast
Sleeping with some light (the blinds not shut completely) was a cause for me, along with stress. No light, not able to see anything waking up, no eldritch horrors in the room and I probably fall asleep again.
where I live there are shops for laptop, console and phone repairs. I’d keep it simple and go to one of those
I’m not sure if it’s your style, but search for Extremoduro or Estopa. I’ll link something later if I remember
tell me you’re not learning with Shakira songs… native speakers can barely understand her 😅😁
slang but not new slang as it’s widely used and it’s even in the RAE dictionary (31 point).
Seemingly used in central america, Argentina, Bolivia, México, Uruguay, Venezuela and Dominican Republic.
“coger” means fuck in latin america, but not in Spain where we use it as “grab/pick” normally. It causes fun reactions to latinamericans visiting or living in Spain for sure as it’s used a lot.
“correr” is also “run” in Spanish, we share a lot of words with Portuguese . 🇵🇹
a curse in the winter time, a blessing in summer
You sound odd, like a child or someone not fluent if you don’t use our misuse the genders of words.
That being said, as native Spanish that lived in the UK for a while, I noticed that genders and verb forms are useful for providing more context when talking.
Cannot think of specific examples now, but in general in a phrase if you don’t hear a word or don’t know the meaning, it is easier to guess it because the rest of the phrase is constructed around the gender and more complex verbal forms.