Learn Spanish (Spain) 🇪🇸
¿Hola como estás? 👋 ! Here’s our curated content for training your passive understanding of the language.
Instructions (tap to open)
⏰ Time spent here also counts towards your streak.
Language competency consists of active vocabulary, but also passive vocabulary and natural pattern recognition. Train essential listening skills, understand grammar and morphing patterns.
Knowing Basic Phrases allows you to stay in the language instead of switching to English. Listening-Reading videos is a comfortable yet intense training of your listening skills. It also allows you to explore the country through videos.
If you want to really be comfortable, have lessons. What makes Lingophant unique is that you can create your 100% personalised vocabulary from conversations. 45 minutes per week with a friend or a teacher is already enough input for a constant stream of engaging sentences to practice between lessons.
📔 Basic Phrases
These phrases are the perfect point of departure for serious learners. They help you stay in the language, without needing to switch to English. And you internalize patterns.
Unlock them one-by-one in the app, and memorize them from the “Practice” tab.
This is just to get you started. For personalized phrases, we recommend sessions of 45 minutes with a native speaker.
- Know 300 phrases and you can make jokes and impress people
- Know 600 phrases and you can hold basic conversations
- Know 1000 phrases and you start communicating effortlessly
And because of working with audio, you’ll get compliments on your pronunciation a lot. We promise!
🎧 Train your listening skills with proper documentaries
We have selected enjoyable documentaries and reportage channels. Watch them, listen to the language, and build a natural intuition. Some polyglots swear by this method — 30 minutes a day builds working proficiency.
BBC News Mundo (4.76m subs)
BBC News Mundo (view channel) – ¡Hola! Bienvenidos a BBC Mundo. Este es el canal oficial de YouTube de la BBC en español. Si te interesa la actualidad internacional y buscas una cobertura imparcial estás en el mejor lugar.
- Los buscadores de migrantes perdidos en el desierto de Sonora |Documental BBC Mundo ganador del EMMY (> 8.33m views)
- Chernobyl: cómo viven quienes volvieron a la zona del peor accidente nuclear de la historia (> 3.89m views)
- Las traileras que recorren las carreteras más peligrosas de México | BBC Mundo (> 2.62m views)
- Las detectives que rescatan víctimas de trata en España | BBC Mundo (> 575k views)
- Éxodo: cómo salí de Cuba | 3 historias de cubanos que arriesgaron sus vidas para llegar a EE.UU. (> 699k views)
- Ayotzinapa: la noche en que desaparecieron 43 estudiantes en México | Documental 1/4 (> 870k views)
- Cómo ocurrió la tragedia de la valla de Melilla que separa España de Marruecos | Documental BBC (> 116k views)
- Formas creativas de tratar la basura en dos países muy distintos | Documental BBC Mundo (> 136k views)
- Las mujeres que luchan para ser sacerdotes de la Iglesia católica (> 70k views)
- “Fuera de forma”: la vida imparable de Matías Fernández Burzaco | BBC Mundo (> 142k views)
- Morir por informar: la muerte de periodistas en México – DOCUMENTAL BBC MUNDO (> 69k views)
- Entrevista de la BBC con Javier Milei: “Lloran por el reconocimiento internacional que tengo” (> 248k views)
DMAX España (2.36m subs)
DMAX España (view channel) – Episodios completos de tus series DMAX favoritas en https://dmax.marca.com/
Eugenio Monesma – Documentales (2.35m subs)
Eugenio Monesma – Documentales (view channel) – Soy Eugenio Monesma, productor y realizador de #DOCUMENTALES ETNOGRÁFICOS. Tras más de 40 años de producción de series documentales de televisión sobre los oficios perdidos, nuestras fiestas, tradiciones, leyendas, gastronomía tradicional, costumbres y rituales, he llegado a constituir uno de los archivos más importantes de España con más de 3.200 documentales etnográficos.
- CHURROS artesanos. Elaboración tradicional de masa y roscas en la Churrería La Mañueta | Documental (> 6.74m views)
- El CARBONERO. Transformación de 10.000 kg de leña en CARBÓN VEGETAL en la naturaleza | Documental (> 6.20m views)
- Olegaria, la MAESTRA ALFARERA. Recogida de tierra y cocción de piezas en horno de leña | Documental (> 3.66m views)
- La TRASHUMANCIA y el PASTOREO TRADICIONAL en 2020. Diario de un viaje con 1000 ovejas | Documental (> 3.09m views)
- PIMENTÓN artesanal. Cultivo, ahumado y elaboración de este condimento natural culinario | Documental (> 2.27m views)
- MIEL y CERA de colmenas centenarias. Obtención artesanal en los troncos de robles vaciados (> 4.37m views)
- El CÁÑAMO en el Pirineo. Cultivo y elaboración tradicional de tejidos y fibras en 1996 | Documental (> 3.65m views)
- CORCHO natural y su transformación en TAPONES. Extracción manual del tronco de los ALCORNOQUES (> 1.90m views)
- VIOLÍN artesanal por un experto LUTHIER. Fabricación paso a paso de este instrumento musical (> 1.67m views)
- El AZAFRÁN. Cultivo, cosecha y extracción manual de esta ESPECIA tan valorada en la GASTRONOMÍA (> 1.09m views)
- El CURTIDOR. Transformación de PIELES crudas en CUERO | El IMPACTANTE proceso que nadie muestra (> 1.89m views)
- CHOZA PRIMITIVA CIRCULAR a mano. Construcción tradicional de un POBLADO de la Edad del Hierro (> 1.89m views)
- DOMA NATURAL de CABALLOS SALVAJES. Técnicas ancestrales para desbravar y domesticar estos animales (> 1.69m views)
- Juguetes antiguos y populares de la infancia. Fabricación artesana | Oficios Perdidos | Documental (> 1.44m views)
- TONEL GIGANTE para conservar 18.000 LITROS de VINO. Construcción de una TINA de madera paso a paso (> 1.68m views)
Tukma Radio (216k subs)
Tukma Radio (view channel) – Tukma Radio es un canal de documentales y relatos sobre folklore argentino, tango y cultura argentina, donde se cuentan las historias detrás de canciones populares, las biografías de artistas, las tragedias de famosos que marcaron época y los misterios que todavía generan preguntas.
Conducta Delictiva (788k subs)
Conducta Delictiva (view channel) – 🚨 Nuevo capítulo todos los Lunes y Miércoles. Conducta Delictiva investiga crímenes reales con entrevistas exclusivas, evidencia y contexto judicial. No hacemos morbo: buscamos prevención. A través de estos relatos identificamos patrones, alertas tempranas y fallas del sistema para que la gente reconozca riesgos y actúe a tiempo.
- Confesiones desde la Cárcel: “ΛS€S1N3 a mi Mejor Amiga tras Descubrir una Traición Oculta” (> 5.67m views)
- ¿El AS£SINO Nace o se hace? Habla el ‘Monstruo de Guarne’ (> 5.14m views)
- La Herencia Maldita de Pablo Escobar: Traición y VENGANZA por el Control de su FORTUNA (> 1.66m views)
- Traicionada por Mi Mejor Amiga: La Oscura Verdad de la Trata, Contada por una Sobreviviente (> 2.08m views)
- “Fui el chef del Bronx: me obligaron a cocinar lo PEOR para seguir con vida” (> 1.60m views)
- Famosas y Narcos: El Oscuro Imperio de Madame Rochy y Su Catálogo de Reinas de Belleza (> 1.54m views)
- El Secreto Detrás del ΛS€S1N4TØ de un Colombiano en Tailandia: El Caso Sancho Un Crimen Mal Planeado (> 916k views)
- El Dictamen Que Cambió Todo En Caso Colmenares: Por primera vez habla forense qué examinó el cuerpo (> 877k views)
- “Mi propio hermano planeó mi S3CUESTRØ: estuve 76 días ENTERR4DØ vivo” (> 946k views)
- “Yo salí de ahí, Yulixa no: habla la amiga que también se operó en el mismo centro estético” (> 1.70m views)
- Me capturaron embarazada acusándome de liderar una banda criminal… hoy crío a mi hija en prisión (> 1.59m views)
- Mi hija escapó de su ex: él la buscó por TODA BOGOTÁ y la M4TØ en un bus del SITP (> 930k views)
- Dentro de la Mente de Javier Velasco: El 4S€S1NØ de Rosa Elvira Cely que Engañó a Todo un País (> 880k views)
Confidencial (539k subs)
Confidencial (view channel) – ¡Este es el canal de Confidencial Nicaragua! 📹🇳🇮
- Lo peor de los dictadores Ortega y Murillo, y lo mejor de Fuera de Broma en 2023 (> 114k views)
- Especial | Crónica de Nicaragua: Así vence la censura el periodismo en el exilio (> 8k views)
- El periodismo de CONFIDENCIAL bajo el estado policial, ante un proceso electoral incierto (> 7k views)
- El economista y profesor de Harvard Dani Rodrik: las reglas del diálogo público-privado (> 5k views)
- La poesía de Gioconda Belli y la lucha por los derechos de las mujeres (> 2k views)
Documentales gratuitos (290k subs)
Documentales gratuitos (view channel) – Vea nuestros últimos documentales sobre la naturaleza y la vida salvaje.
- Maravillas salvajes: Comportamiento animal cautivador y paisajes majestuosos | Episodio Completo (> 2.33m views)
- Los gigantes rugientes – Explorando la vida de tigres, leones y jaguares | Episodio Completo (> 1.30m views)
- La Magia de los Pájaros | Episodio Completo (> 1.05m views)
- Entre Lobos y Gigantes: El Último Bosque Virgen | Epiosdio Completo (> 195k views)
- La lucha por sobrevivir bajo tus pies 🐜| Episodio Completo (> 120k views)
- El Mundo Salvaje: Aventuras en la Selva Amazónica | Episodio Completo (> 105k views)
- Costa Rica: Donde Vive 5% del Planeta | Documental Completo (> 87k views)
- Descubre tú los secretos del océano abierto | Episodio Completo (> 73k views)
- Sabana Africana: Cómo 5 especies animales sobreviven en la naturaleza | Episodio Completo (> 85k views)
- Vida Extrema en Madagascar 🦎 | Documental de Naturaleza Increíble | Episodio Completo (> 21k views)
- El Ártico | Vida Salvaje en el Extremo del Mundo | Documental (> 10k views)
- La vida secreta de los animales nocturnos | Episodio Completo (> 9k views)
- La Gran Barrera de Coral | Vida Marina y Animales del Océano | Episodio Completo (> 34k views)
- Los Animales Más Resistentes del Planeta | Episodio Completo (> 21k views)
- Pradera Americana: bisontes, zorros y caballos salvajes | Episodio Completo (> 39k views)
Museo Nacional del Prado (252k subs)
Museo Nacional del Prado (view channel) – Vídeos sobre las obras de arte del Museo del Prado, exposiciones, conferencias, cursos monográficos, seminarios, restauraciones y estudios técnicos de sus obras maestras. Conoce más sobre artistas como Velázquez, Goya, Murillo, El Greco, Tiziano, El Bosco, Rafael, Ribera, Rubens, Durero, etc.
Historia Critica (164k subs)
Historia Critica (view channel) – Desde Historia Critica producimos documentales de actualidad e historia, como también cubrimos las principales noticias internacionales.
Antártica Press (30k subs)
Antártica Press (view channel) – Periodismo en territorio.
- Mutilación Genital Femenina: un documental con testimonios de sobrevivientes | Antártica Press (> 3.11m views)
- Migrar de Senegal a España: testimonios de quienes sobrevivieron a la Ruta Canaria | Antártica Press (> 95k views)
- Así es cruzar África y el Mediterráneo para llegar a Europa: la ruta migratoria desde adentro (> 55k views)
- MIGRAR POR LAS MONTAÑAS: así es la PELIGROSA RUTA DE LOS ALPES que usan MILES DE MIGRANTES (> 3k views)
- Lucha contra la Mutilación Genital Femenina: entrevistamos a su principal referente, Waris Dirie (> 81k views)
Democracy Now! en español (21k subs)
Democracy Now! en español (view channel) – El noticiero independiente Democracy Now!, el Informe de Guerra y Paz se produce diariamente en Nueva York, y en una hora repasa las informaciones más importantes del mundo y de EE.UU. El proyecto Democracy Now! en español, DN!es, surgió en el 2005 con la idea de poner a disposición de las radios de habla hispana de América Latina y el mundo noticias internacionales elaboradas desde una perspectiva independiente. Todos los servicios se ofrecen sin costo. Los únicos requisitos son: a) citar la fu
Museo Reina Sofía (15k subs)
Museo Reina Sofía (view channel) – El Museo Reina Sofía busca examinar la potencia crítica del arte en la sociedad y en la cultura contemporánea. Este análisis se realiza mediante tres vías: de un lado, repensando cuál es la función del Museo hoy; de otro, analizando los mecanismos de mediación entre el público y la institución y, por último, proponiendo nuevos contextos y narraciones a través de la colección y las exposiciones que conduzcan a una nueva noción de modernidad.
- Aquí no hay nada que comprender. Un documental sobre Elena Asins (> 8k views)
- Contar otras historias. Entrevista a Walter Mignolo (> 6k views)
- Fuera del canon. Las artistas pop en la Colección (> 2k views)
- Ignacio Gómez de Liaño (> 2k views)
- Autoras de cómic adulto en España (> 555 views)
- Educación: Cuando algo es posible (> 3k views)
- Entrevista a Niño de Elche. A propósito de “Los aires llevan mentiras” (> 504 views)
- Picasso. Gertrude Stein y Pablo Picasso: La invención del lenguaje. Conferencia a cargo de Cécil… (> 305 views)
- Eva Lootz. Hacer como quien dice: ¿y esto qué es? (> 168 views)
- Música para romper el dominio. Entrevista a Alexandra T. Vázquez (> 796 views)
🎧 Train listening with weird popular YouTube videos
It’s like zapping TV through another linguistic and cultural universe. Watch what native speakers watch. We hope you find something interesting.
- un día con mi novia (> 3.19m views) – channel: YoSoyPlex (> 14.80m subs)
- 10 PRODUCTOS ESCOLARES PROHIBIDOS EN EL COLEGIO !! (> 7.39m views) – channel: Alejo Igoa (> 116.00m subs)
- Sendokai Champions 3: Rebirth | Episodios 1 & 2 | UEFA Champions League (> 991k views) – channel: Sendokai Champions – Canal Oficial (> 1.14m subs)
- Así es trabajar en AMAZON: ¡todos los secretos de ALEXA+! 🤖 (> 3.17m views) – channel: Luisito Comunica (> 45.80m subs)
- ¿Quién es mejor en TODOS los DEPORTES? MINIBUYER vs ALEN (> 999k views) – channel: xBuyer (> 5.98m subs)
- Así es la Vida de Un Millonario en República Dominicana! 🇩🇴 | El Mejor País de LATAM (> 866k views) – channel: Nil Ojeda (> 4.90m subs)
- 🚨 NOTICIAS PARÍS EN LLAMAS DISTURBIOS LA CIUDAD ES UNA ZONA DE GUERRA (> 221k views) – channel: Estrategias Militares (> 527k subs)
- MIS HIJAS HAN LLEGADO DEMASIADO LEJOS…¡MATAN A CRUSH! (> 924k views) – channel: ARTA GAME (> 6.40m subs)
- Por Qué Este Teclado Cuesta MÁS DE $1000 DÓLARES??? (> 259k views) – channel: YANPOL (> 1.88m subs)
- SI TE RÍES PIERDES EN UNA PELUQUERÍA (cámara oculta) (> 589k views) – channel: FrikBoys (> 496k subs)
- Nos Esperan 27h Viajando.. | Visitando las 7 Maravillas (> 184k views) – channel: Carlo Marañon (> 268k subs)
- Buscan segundo 4BUS4DØR de B3B€ de 6 M3S3S Mía Kataleya en El Espinal: 10 Millones de RECOMPENSA (> 631k views) – channel: Más Allá del Silencio Podcast (> 1.12m subs)
- Malas Noticias para EEUU / Explosión del New Glenn (> 344k views) – channel: Detrás de Sergio Hidalgo (> 444k subs)
- NVIDIA acaba de admitir que la IA es más cara que tú (> 146k views) – channel: MoureDev by Brais Moure (> 893k subs)
- SPURS ELIMINA A THUNDER, WEMBY MVP ¡KNICKS VS SAN ANTONIO! (> 55k views) – channel: demas6Basket (> 557k subs)
- HOUSE TOUR Nuestra casa en Inglaterra ☕️ Estilo vintage y cozy (> 54k views) – channel: Orangepassport (> 107k subs)
- NADIE SABE NADA 13×27 | El 500 de Menda y Lerenda (> 118k views) – channel: Nadie Sabe Nada (> 261k subs)
- Esta semana no se me permitió ser vaga 🙁 (> 64k views) – channel: GER (> 91k subs)
- El problema con los “pobre vlogs” (> 420k views) – channel: Yiseni Perez (> 1.57m subs)
- LIDL saca un BATERÍA de BALCÓN por menos de 300€ y se VUELVE VIRAL (> 265k views) – channel: Borja – Academia Energía Solar (> 171k subs)
🧑🏫 Grammar overview in 9 chapters
Below is an overview of the most important grammar topics. Each chapter has a short explanation and recommended videos.
While memorizing phrases, you’ll likely recognize patterns from grammar. You can add a note or question to a card and get it answered next time you’re with a teacher.
Ser vs. Estar (Two Verbs for ‘To Be’) A1
Spanish has two separate verbs where English uses one: ‘ser’ and ‘estar’, both meaning ‘to be’. Ser is used for permanent or defining characteristics — identity, nationality, profession, and inherent qualities (e.g. ‘Soy inglés’ — I am English; ‘Es médica’ — She is a doctor). Estar is used for temporary states, locations, emotions, and conditions (e.g. ‘Estoy cansado’ — I am tired; ‘Está en Madrid’ — He is in Madrid). Both verbs are fully irregular, so their forms need to be memorised: soy/eres/es/somos/sois/son and estoy/estás/está/estamos/estáis/están.
A useful trick is to link ‘estar’ with the word ‘state’ — both share the same Latin root, and states are temporary. When you meet a new adjective, ask yourself: is this a defining feature (ser) or a current condition (estar)? Some adjectives actually change meaning depending on which verb you use — ‘estar aburrido’ means you feel bored right now, while ‘ser aburrido’ means you are a boring person by nature. Mastering this distinction lets you describe yourself, people, and places accurately in everyday introductions, directions, and conversations about how you or others feel.
- When to Use Ser or Estar | Spanish For Beginners (Ep.2.5) – AIB: Extremely popular beginner-focused video (2.5M views) that reviews ser first before clearly contrasting it with estar, with structured timestamps ideal for A1 learners.
- Ser or estar? [Speaking Spanish] – Butterfly Spanish: Highly viewed (1.5M) and well-structured lesson that directly addresses common learner confusion between ser and estar with clear examples and an engaging teaching style.
- SER vs. ESTAR – The COMPLETE guide 🇪🇸 | How to Use “To Be” in Spanish Correctly – My Daily Spanish: A comprehensive yet accessible 12-minute guide covering all key use cases for both verbs with clear examples, making it an excellent reference for beginners wanting full coverage of the topic.
Present Tense (Regular & Key Irregular Verbs) A1
The Spanish present tense covers not just what is happening now but also habitual actions and general truths — making it the single most used tense in conversation. Regular verbs follow predictable patterns based on their infinitive ending: -ar verbs (hablar → hablo, hablas, habla…), -er verbs (comer → como, comes, come…), and -ir verbs (vivir → vivo, vives, vive…). However, the most frequent verbs in Spanish — tener (to have), ir (to go), querer (to want), poder (to be able to), hacer (to do/make), venir (to come) — are all irregular and must be learned individually since they appear constantly in real speech.
Rather than drilling conjugation tables in isolation, learn these high-frequency irregular verbs inside short, ready-to-use phrases: ‘tengo que…’ (I have to…), ‘quiero un…’ (I want a…), ‘puedo ayudarte’ (I can help you). Chunking them this way means you absorb the irregular form and a useful sentence frame at the same time. Once you have the present tense, you can express your daily routine, talk about what you like or want, ask questions, and hold a basic conversation entirely in the app and in real life.
- Spanish conjugation animated explanation video – Lingo Learner: Covers both regular -ar/-er/-ir verbs and key irregulars (ser, ir) in an animated, beginner-friendly format with high view count proving its accessibility.
- Irregular Verbs in Spanish in the Present Tense: Conjugation and Examples – Spanish Learning Lab: Clearly bridges regular and irregular verb conjugation with real examples and simple explanations, ideal for A1 learners building on the basics.
- Irregular Verbs in Spanish | The Language Tutor *Lesson 21* – The Language Tutor – Spanish: Provides a structured, well-paced lesson on key irregular present-tense verbs (hacer, tener, venir, etc.) that beginners need to master early.
Noun Gender & Articles (el/la/un/una) A1
Every Spanish noun has a grammatical gender — masculine or feminine — and this affects the articles and adjectives that accompany it. The definite articles are ‘el’ (masculine singular) and ‘la’ (feminine singular), with plurals ‘los’ and ‘las’. The indefinite articles are ‘un’ and ‘una’. While many masculine nouns end in -o and feminine nouns in -a (el libro, la mesa), there are plenty of exceptions (el día, la mano), so it is best to learn each noun together with its article from the start. Adjectives must also agree in gender and number: ‘un chico alto’ but ‘una chica alta’.
The most effective habit is never to learn a noun alone — always learn it as a chunk with its article: ‘el problema’, ‘la ciudad’, ‘el agua’. When you hear or read new words in the app, notice the article immediately and let it become part of the word’s identity in your memory. Getting gender right unlocks fluent, natural-sounding Spanish across everything you say — descriptions, shopping, asking for directions — because mismatched articles are one of the first things native speakers notice.
- Definite and Indefinite Articles in Spanish | The Language Tutor *Lesson 11* – The Language Tutor – Spanish: Highly popular structured lesson covering both definite and indefinite articles with gender, plurals, and clear examples — ideal for A1 beginners.
- Definite/indefinite articles in Spanish beginner explanation: artículos definidos/indefinidos, el la – Lingo Learner: Animated beginner-friendly explanation that builds from English article concepts to Spanish el/la/un/una, including the feminine exception rule, making it very accessible for A1 learners.
- EL? LA? How to choose the correct gender in Spanish – All You Need to Know About Spanish Articles – My Daily Spanish: Concise, well-structured video focused specifically on determining noun gender and choosing between el and la, directly addressing the core challenge of this topic.
Preterite Tense (Completed Past Actions) A2
The preterite (pretérito indefinido) is the main tense for talking about completed actions in the past — specific events with a clear beginning and end. Regular -ar verbs take endings like -é, -aste, -ó, -amos, -asteis, -aron (e.g. hablé — I spoke), while -er/-ir verbs use -í, -iste, -ió, -imos, -isteis, -ieron. Unfortunately, the most common verbs are irregular in the preterite: ser and ir share the same forms (fui, fuiste, fue…), and tener, hacer, estar, and poder all have irregular stems (tuve, hice, estuve, pude). In Spain, the preterite is used for any finished past action, even one from earlier today — ‘Esta mañana fui al supermercado’ (This morning I went to the supermarket).
Start by nailing the big five irregular verbs (ser/ir, tener, hacer, estar, poder) since they appear in virtually every past-tense conversation. A useful mnemonic for the regular -ar endings is to notice they mirror a rhythmic pattern: -é, -aste, -ó / -amos, -asteis, -aron. Once you have the preterite, you can tell stories, recount your day, describe travel experiences, and understand the vast majority of narrative speech you will encounter — unlocking real storytelling ability in Spanish.
- Spanish Preterite: Master The Simple Past Tense – BaseLang: Focuses directly on the preterite tense for completed past actions with clear structure and examples, at an ideal length for A2 learners.
- Preterite/pretérito in Spanish: how to form it & learn it! Easy animated explanation for beginners. – Lingo Learner: Animated and beginner-friendly explanation of how to form regular preterites with high view count confirming its effectiveness for A2 learners.
- Preterite Tense w/ AR Verbs | Spanish for Beginners – AIB: Dedicated beginner lesson on preterite -AR verb conjugations, directly matching the topic description’s focus on regular verb endings.
Reflexive Verbs (me/te/se…) A2
Reflexive verbs are extraordinarily common in Spanish and are used for daily routines, emotional states, and many fixed expressions that have no direct English equivalent. They are formed with reflexive pronouns: me, te, se, nos, os, se — placed before the conjugated verb. Some verbs are always reflexive (levantarse — to get up, llamarse — to be called, ducharse — to shower), while others change meaning when made reflexive: ‘dormir’ means to sleep, but ‘dormirse’ means to fall asleep; ‘ir’ means to go, but ‘irse’ means to leave/go away. The se form is also used in Spain to make impersonal statements: ‘Se habla español aquí’ (Spanish is spoken here).
The easiest way to internalise reflexive verbs is through daily routine vocabulary, since almost every morning action uses them — me despierto (I wake up), me ducho (I shower), me visto (I get dressed), me voy (I leave). Practise these as a mental commentary on your own morning and they will stick fast. Mastering reflexive verbs lets you describe your day naturally, understand a huge range of common phrases you will encounter in the app, and avoid the very common learner mistake of dropping the pronoun entirely.
- Learn Spanish Grammar – Reflexive Verbs in Spanish – Butterfly Spanish: Highly popular and comprehensive lesson that clearly explains reflexive verbs with many real examples, making it ideal for A2 learners building confidence with daily routine vocabulary.
- Reflexive Verbs in Spanish | The Language Tutor *Lesson 37* – The Language Tutor – Spanish: Well-structured, teacher-led explanation with examples and practice exercises at an appropriate pace for A2 learners, with strong view count confirming its effectiveness.
- Levantar vs Levantarse (A Lesson on Reflexive Verbs) – Real Fast Spanish: Concise and focused lesson that uses a concrete verb pair to clearly illustrate how reflexive vs. non-reflexive forms change meaning, a key concept for A2 learners.
Object Pronouns (me/te/lo/la/le…) A2
Object pronouns replace nouns that have already been mentioned, keeping speech fluid and natural. Direct object pronouns answer ‘what?’ or ‘whom?’ — me, te, lo, la, nos, os, los, las (e.g. ‘¿Ves el coche? Sí, lo veo’ — Do you see the car? Yes, I see it). Indirect object pronouns answer ‘to whom?’ or ‘for whom?’ — me, te, le, nos, os, les (e.g. ‘Le doy el libro a María’ — I give the book to María). In Spain, a notable quirk is that ‘le/les’ is widely used instead of ‘lo/los’ when referring to people as a direct object — ‘Le veo a Juan’ instead of ‘Lo veo a Juan’ — a feature called leísmo. Crucially, these pronouns come before the conjugated verb in most cases.
The key to learning this system is to stop translating word-for-word and instead notice where pronouns sit relative to the verb. Listen carefully in the app to where ‘me lo da’ (he gives it to me) or ‘te lo digo’ (I’m telling you) appear — these double-pronoun combinations are everywhere in real speech. Once object pronouns click, you can respond naturally in conversation without repeating the same noun over and over, and you will suddenly understand a large number of phrases that previously sounded like a blur of short words.
- Rapidly Improve Your Spanish with Direct Object Pronouns – The Language Tutor – Spanish: A structured, clearly explained lesson focused specifically on direct object pronouns with practical examples, ideal for A2 learners, at an optimal length and with high proven reach.
- Indirect Object Pronouns in Spanish | The Language Tutor *Lesson 27* – The Language Tutor – Spanish: A well-structured companion lesson to the direct object pronouns video, covering indirect object pronouns (me/te/le/nos/os/les) clearly and concisely for beginner-intermediate learners.
- Understand Spanish Object Pronouns in 8 Minutes – Breakthrough Spanish: Covers both direct and indirect object pronouns together in a concise 8-minute format, making it a great quick-reference overview for A2 learners wanting the full picture at once.
Key Verb Constructions (ir a, tener que, estar + -ando) A2
Spanish makes heavy use of multi-word verb constructions that combine a conjugated verb with an infinitive or gerund. Three are absolutely essential: ‘ir a + infinitive’ expresses the near future (voy a comer — I’m going to eat), ‘tener que + infinitive’ expresses obligation (tengo que trabajar — I have to work), and ‘estar + gerund (-ando/-iendo)’ expresses an action in progress (estoy comiendo — I am eating). These constructions are used constantly in everyday speech and are often more natural-sounding than the formal future or imperfect continuous tenses that textbooks introduce early.
Think of each construction as a fixed frame with a blank slot: ‘voy a ___’, ‘tengo que ___’, ‘estoy ___ando’. Once you know the frame, you can slot in any verb you know and immediately produce a huge range of new sentences. Practise filling the frames with verbs you already know from the app, and you will rapidly expand your productive vocabulary. These three constructions alone allow you to talk about your plans, your obligations, and what you are doing right now — covering a massive proportion of real everyday conversation from an early stage.
Present Subjunctive (Wishes, Doubt & Emotion) B1
The subjunctive is a verbal mood — not a tense — that Spanish uses to express wishes, recommendations, doubt, emotion, and hypothetical situations. It appears in a dependent clause introduced by ‘que’ after trigger verbs and expressions: querer que (to want someone to), esperar que (to hope that), recomendar que (to recommend that), no creer que (not to believe that), and many more (e.g. ‘Quiero que vengas’ — I want you to come; ‘Es importante que hables despacio’ — It’s important that you speak slowly). For regular verbs, the present subjunctive is formed by taking the yo present-tense form, dropping the -o, and adding opposite-vowel endings: -ar verbs take -e endings, -er/-ir verbs take -a endings.
The best way to approach the subjunctive is not to memorise a rule, but to recognise the trigger phrases that always call for it. Keep a personal list of triggers — ‘quiero que’, ‘espero que’, ‘es necesario que’ — and when you see or hear them, expect the subjunctive to follow. Listening carefully to these patterns in the app will help you develop an ear for when it sounds ‘right’. Once you have a working knowledge of the present subjunctive, you can express opinions with nuance, give advice politely, and understand the enormous number of everyday Spanish sentences that contain it — a huge leap in comprehension and naturalness.
- The Subjunctive in Spanish | The Language Tutor *Lesson 58* – The Language Tutor – Spanish: A structured, high-view lesson that clearly introduces the subjunctive mood with examples of wishes, doubt, and emotion — ideal for B1 learners at an appropriate 16-minute length.
- Spanish Subjunctive Simplified For Beginners – BaseLang: A well-rounded 10-minute explainer that covers the subjunctive mood including desires and uncertainty with clear, beginner-friendly examples and solid view count to back its quality.
- SUBJUNTIVO vs INDICATIVO: Don’t ever confuse these again! – Spring Spanish – Learn Spanish with Chunks: Directly addresses the key B1 challenge of knowing when to use the subjunctive versus the indicative, using memorable chunking techniques with real conversational examples.
Imperfect vs. Preterite (Past Tense Contrast) B1
Once you know the preterite, the next major step is the imperfect tense (pretérito imperfecto), and understanding when to use each one. The preterite describes completed, specific past events (‘Ayer llamé a mi madre’ — Yesterday I called my mum), while the imperfect describes ongoing background states, habitual past actions, and descriptions in the past (‘Cuando era pequeño, vivía en Sevilla’ — When I was young, I lived in Seville; ‘Llovía mucho’ — It was raining a lot). A classic pattern is to use the imperfect for the background and the preterite for the event that cuts across it: ‘Leía cuando sonó el teléfono’ — I was reading when the phone rang. The imperfect is very regular: -ar verbs take -aba endings, and -er/-ir verbs take -ía endings, with only three irregular verbs (ser, ir, ver).
A vivid mental image helps: picture the imperfect as a movie scene — the ongoing backdrop, atmosphere, and habits — and the preterite as a camera flash capturing a single moment. When narrating any story, you will naturally switch between the two. Practise retelling simple past events in the app using both tenses and notice how the story comes alive. Controlling this contrast transforms your Spanish from stilted past-tense narration into fluent, natural storytelling — the kind that sounds genuinely native when you recount trips, childhood memories, or yesterday’s events.
- Spanish Past Tense: Preterite Vs. Imperfect, Rule of Thumb – The Spanish Dude: Highly popular and concise (under 8 minutes), this video uses a clear ‘rule of thumb’ framework that makes the preterite vs. imperfect contrast immediately practical for B1 learners.
- Using the Preterite and Imperfect to Tell Stories in Spanish – Spanish With Qroo Paul: An excellent practice-focused complement that walks learners through real story sentences and prompts them to choose the correct tense, reinforcing the contrast in context.
- Spanish Past Tense: Preterite vs Imperfect – Learn Spanish with SpanishPod101.com: A well-structured, short explanation (just over 4 minutes) with strong view count validation, offering clear examples that help beginners and intermediate learners quickly grasp the key distinctions.
