[Course Forum] Inglés 1 - 7 de Memrise (English for Spanish speakers)

Inglés 1, nivel 8
This man clearly says sevenTH… Not a big problem

Maybe you can just :scissors: out the -th- part…

2 Likes

Hello again
I found a mistake here


It’s little but it may confuse
For me, the right translation for “es una emergencia” Is “it’s an emergency”

Greetings,

Kevin

2 Likes

Hola @OneLessonMore:

Gracias por informarnos de este error, he eliminado el vídeo erróneo. Gracias de nuevo y sigue aprendiendo. :slight_smile:
Saludos,

Ángela

4 Likes

Good afternoon @angileptol
I’m confuse in this word?
Is the audio correct?

Greetings,

Kevin

1 Like

Hello again @angileptol
I found a mistake here, in English III


It’s little but it may confuse
For me, the right translation for “una Universidad” Is “an University”
Greetings,

Kevin

Hi Kevin @OneLessonMore !

as univesity sounds like ‘yuni’ then only the article a is used not ‘an’. An is used when the sound of the word starts with a vowel

2 Likes

Thanks Atikker, I understood your explanation
I am wrong :smiley:

Greetings

Kevin

Hello,

Level 1 of Inglés 7 (Reino Unido) has a mistake.

It says “store” instead of “shop”. In Britain you can’t buy things in a store, a store only has the other meaning, as in storage.

Hola

Nivel 1 de Inglés 7 (Reino Unido) tiene un error.

Pone “store” en vez de “shop”. En el RU no se puede comprar nada en un “store”, esa palabra significa algo como almacén.

1 Like

Good Afternoon to all Memrise Community, especially @Atikker @angileptol :grinning:
I have a question about this sentence


Why is there a gap between “to make” and “angry”?
It is a rule or a native expression?

Greetings,

Kevin

1 Like

That is where you put the object of the verb.

hacer enfadar a Juan
to make Juan angry

hacer enfadar a alguien
to make somebody angry

2 Likes

Thanks for your prompt response @lurajane
That was a great explanation

Have a nice Day,

Kevin

1 Like

Enfadar without hacer is waaaaaaaaaaaaaay more common… bit odd on a beginners course? Oh well! Maybe it’s regional? Or maybe the Spanish person who made the course decided to keep it as close to the English as possible, even if it meant choosing a more unusual Spanish expression.

Good afternoon to all the Memrise’s Community.
I have a doubt in this sentence


I’m from Chile and I never heard that expression (“esta chupado”)
Can anyone explain me?

Greetings,
Kevin

Hi! @OneLessonMore You use this English phrase (“it’s a piece of cake”) to say that something is really easy

@angileptol What I meant - I thought it would have been obvious - was the normal thing would have been to have a link to the course, wouldn’t it? Or is it assumed that people would only come here if they had already found the course and not vice versa?

Please see the new description, is that what you meant? Thanks!

Angela

3 Likes

@angileptol, yes, that was what I meant although the images occupy a lot of space, don’t you think so? I do mine differently: [Course Forum] Italian Level from 0 - A1 - A2, FULL AUDIO by ChiewPang

Hi Guys @lurajane @ChiewPang @RabbitWho @angileptol @Atikker and @AllMemriseCommunity
I’m happy because I finished the seven courses of British English, so, I am looking for another courses to continue learning.
My question is: Do you know a good course to continue learning?
I will wait for their responses.

Have a nice day,
Kevin

@OneLessonMore Hi Kevin, for that level, perhaps Picture Dictionary. It’s mainly vocabulary and there may be words you are already familiar with, so just “ignore” them. It’s an ongoing course, meaning more levels are added from time to time.

You can also try Siscocan. It’s more business-oriented and perhaps not as orderly, but I’m sure you can learn from it, too.

Just remember that with any course, you can choose to “ignore” words and you can choose the level you wish to study first.

If you have any problems, let me know.

Chiew

1 Like

@ChiewPang Chiew, Thanks for your quick response
I am going to review them.
By the way (checked by @ChiewPang) , Do you know other course or application for learn grammar?

Greetings,
Kevin