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  1. Gente= a set of "personas" forming a group. Example: Hablé con la gente de la organización (I spoke with THE PEOPLE from the organization). Persona/s are individual people, or several people, but in principle you could count them up. So saying "me gusta las personas aqui" (I like the people here) is wrong. If you like a person "here," then ...

  2. 1 mars 2018 · One refers to the entirety of European people, the other to the individual populations (la gente española, la francesa, la alemana, etc) @Erin Usage for "Gentes" in Spanish is equivalent to usage for "Peoples" in English, that is, it's more widely used when speaking about different groups of people as a plural amount i.e. "Las gentes nativas a ...

  3. 7 sept. 2024 · Mucha gente es aficionada al deporte: “Gente” is a singular collective noun, so it takes a singular verb and adjective. Therefore, “es aficionada” is correct. In Spanish, adjectives must agree in gender and number with the nouns they modify, which can be different from English.

  4. 27 oct. 2015 · Bromas aparte, sí tiene diferencia, aunque no mucha. Como toda frase, el orden y el uso de pronombres matiza su sonido y sentido. Si decimos "a mí" es como cuando en inglés se empieza con un "to me": connota que es algo muy personal, poniendo el acento en ese hecho en posible contraposición a la opinión de el resto de la gente. Cuando no ...

  5. 11 juil. 2016 · La gente viene hoy a la fiesta. (I want people to know that gente is the first thing I want them to hear from me.) Viene la gente hoy a la fiesta. (I just want to put later the noun because for me it's important to mention that the action is being carried out.)

  6. 19 janv. 2023 · It is simply sarcasm. It is not unique to Spanish, and it is not unique to the word poco. In many languages, many words can be meant as their exact opposite, depending on context and inflection. Not sure if related. But in English "quite" usually means "very" but funny enough when you say "There are quite a few people" it doesn't mean "there ...

  7. 12 avr. 2018 · 1. asked Apr 11, 2018 at 22:51. Simple. 1,090 1 11 19. 2. Se puede is impersonal by definition, hence you use it mostly in cases you could also say e.g. is it OK/possible/allowed to in English. In ¿se puede? there is a entrar omitted: as if asking is it Ok to come in?.

  8. 19 févr. 2018 · 5. El Diccionario de Autoridades (tomo O-R, 1737) nos da directamente la respuesta: PATAN. s.m. El hombre záfio, tosco y campesino. Llámase assi, porque ordinariamente tiene grandes patas ò pies, y las hace mayores con el calzado tosco que trahe.

  9. 27 avr. 2020 · Literally, "en pelotas" means: "in balls", i.e. "with balls (testicles) exposed". The term "en pelotas" can be used in several ways, but I think that the most general word to describe its meaning is " devoid ". The literal use means: " devoid of clothes (so that my balls are exposed)". A very important fact about the use of this expression is ...

  10. La clase, la torre and la gente come from the feminine Latin words, classis, turris and gens. DRAE access 19 Sept 2014; Latdict access 19 Sept 2014. Hombre and pie come from the masculine Latin words homo and pie. DRAE; Latdict. Equipaje comes from the Spanish verb equipar, which in turn is from the French verb équipar. DRAE. In French, the ...

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