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Simplified and native speakers:
Simplified example
Guadalupe Cruz Medina
Roxana Danae Bannach
Idalia Tijerina
César Augusto Espinoza
Karla González
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Click red links to download .m4v files for use in iPod:
Simplified example
Guadalupe Cruz Medina
Roxana Danae Bannach
Idalia Tijerina
César Augusto Espinoza
Karla González
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Simplified Example "La vida sería terrible sin electricidad..." |
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Guadalupe Cruz Medina México, D.F. "Bueno, sin electricidad sería terrible..." |
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Roxana Danae Bannach Chile, Santiago "La pregunta es más o menos fácil..." |
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Idalia Tijerina México, Monterrey, N.L. "Pues, la pregunta sobre cómo cambiaría mi vida..." |
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César Augusto Espinoza Perú, Ancash "En realidad, si no hubiera electricidad la vida sería muy monótona..." |
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Karla González México, San Luis Potosí, Xilitla "Cuando yo era pequeña viví cuatro años en la casa de mis abuelos..." |
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Imperfect subjunctive and Conditional tenses
Talking about hypothetical situations, or situations that are contrary to fact, requires some rather complicated grammar. In Spanish, if you are speaking about hypothetical situations for the present time you might want to use the following pattern:
Another common construction which uses the imperfect subjunctive is the phrase como si (as if) to express a situation that is contrary to fact.
The imperfect subjunctive is formed by taking the third person plural of the preterite minus -on.
To this stem you add the following endings: -a, -as, -a, -amos, -ais, -an.
The conditional tense is formed by adding –ía: -ías, -ía, -íamos, -íais, or –ían to the end of the infinitive form of the verb.
Verbs that have irregular forms in the future are also irregular in the conditional. They use the same stem in the conditional as they did in the future tense.
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