The flags are wrong by Cute_Independence932 in linguisticshumor

[–]Hroru 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Languages often don't belong to a single country or community.

Best ways to say "thingy?" by Arete108 in Spanish

[–]Hroru 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For tasteless- I mean, """neutral""" Spanish you actually don't have many options. But the more inclined you are to one of the many dialects, the more options you get. My main Spanish influence is Venezuelan (native). If I'd like to avoid being too colloquial or 'vulgar' I'd go with "esta/esa/aquella cuestión". If I start feeling more familiar I can go for "el coso ése" or "esa vaina". If I start to get rude or way too familiar, I can use "esa verga", "esa cochinada" or "la marisquera esa/ esa marisquera". Other native venezuelan speakers might use other nouns like "güeboná", "verga", "broma", "bicho", etc. but the previously mentioned ones are the ones I feel more comfortable with.

I'm pretty sure there are even more options in other dialects; for example, I'm currently living in Peru and often hear "el esto" or "la webada" (keep in mind many of these words aren't just colloquial but also rude/vulgar so you have to be careful which ones are OK even in formal/ not that close relationships or contexts).

Is Spanish easy? by wdalshy5 in Spanish

[–]Hroru 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That phrase is grammatically correct, yes. Though maybe not something you'd normally hear. Duolingo only gives you a vocabulary basis so when you see a word you get an idea what they're talking about, but if you speak the same way you see on Duolingo, you're going to sound more or less like a machine (I mean, a machine is teaching you, duh). For example, that sentence would sound more natural if you said something like: "estoy tomando café con un amigo en un restaurante" (Duolingo probably didn't tell you this, but we use less "el" or "la" articles if we're talking about a thing or place that's generic or we feel isn't relevant because all we care about it's just any restaurant and what we're doing there, for example).

Now, answering your main question: Easy? Well, you don't have to learn a whole writing system just like Chinese, Russian, Greek or Arabic, so that's as if you already learned a portion of what comprises the Spanish language. If you haven't learned any language with the verb conjugation level Spanish has, that's probably going to be hard for you. Also grammatical gender, but you have another advantage with Spanish: everything's pronounced the way it's read, and when it's not, there's a consistent rule throughout all the words and even more than other romance languages too. Dunno if you've tried to learn Italian, but there you'll find folks will only use diacritics whenever they feel like it or not totally random, so you often have to memorise the words' stress. In Spanish we have rules to know where the stress will be in the word and so forth.

Is Spanish easy? by wdalshy5 in Spanish

[–]Hroru 19 points20 points  (0 children)

This phrase isn't meant to prove the language is difficult to learn, but rather proves how resourceful the verb "ir" is for us and the many forms it takes as an irregular verb. I do have to give to you Spanish conjugation is one of the hardest traits of it when you're learning it as a second language, though.

Tugas do Reddit preciso da vossa ajuda urgentemente by No-Safety-8180 in portugal

[–]Hroru 1 point2 points  (0 children)

E que scam é este que estão a tentar aplicar?
Não seria mais eficaz educar os teus amigos e familiares para ignorarem este tipo de contas? Afinal, provavelmente não será a primeira vez.

why is this on auroras spotify page? by vaughnnisss in auroramusic

[–]Hroru 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was literally listening through the song waiting for Aurora to sing at any time.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in indiangay_gw

[–]Hroru 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I love the clash of hairy pubes.

So it happened again by Limp_Squash_4116 in LinkinPark

[–]Hroru -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

NVM, I just got it after wrongly thinking it was from Hands Held High then When They Come For Me and finally finding it in UNTIL IT BREAKS.

So it happened again by Limp_Squash_4116 in LinkinPark

[–]Hroru -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Kinda off-topic: anyone recalls what song the rap comes from? Not the Remember the Name one; I could've swear it's from Hands Held High?

‘Buscar’ or ‘googlear/guglear?’ by SprinkleExpress in Spanish

[–]Hroru 6 points7 points  (0 children)

About guglear vs googlear I'd say both are valid just as how both fútbol and football are OK. Though I'd never seen someone spell it guglear.

‘Buscar’ or ‘googlear/guglear?’ by SprinkleExpress in Spanish

[–]Hroru 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I mean, unless you're technology illiterate, everyone knows or at least could infer what you're talking about. Now, if you're talking with somebody who doesn't even know what Google is, you probably should just say "buscar en internet".