Lesson 2.1.3 · Más Palabras Esenciales
🔗 Esenciales 3 — Pronombres & Conectores
The pronouns, possessives, and connecting words that wire everyday Spanish together — la, se, este, cuando, durante, ustedes, mío, tuyo, and the rest of the small words that show up in every sentence.
Sub-lessons
Break this lesson into focused chunks. Each sub-lesson has its own Memory Lab — active recall, mnemonics, elaboration, interleaved review, and shadowing — scoped to just those words.
Articles, Pronouns & Possessives
Spanish leans on tiny words to mark gender, ownership, and who's doing what. These are the ones you'll need most.
the (f.)
Same as 'el' but for feminine nouns.
a / an (f.)
oneself / himself / herself
Reflexive — Él se ducha.
this (m.)
these (m.)
these (f.)
others (m.)
many
they (m.)
to them / to you all
you (informal)
Heard less in Bogotá/Medellín — usted is more common.
you (formal)
Default in Colombia, even with friends and pets.
your (informal)
No accent — possessive.
you all
Vosotros isn't used in Colombia.
mine
yours (informal)
his / hers / yours (formal)
his / hers / yours (formal, f.)
Connectors & Prepositions
The little hinges that join ideas, mark time, and point in a direction.
like / as / how
when (statement)
No accent here = statement; ¿cuándo? = question.
from / since
during
before
against
Memory lab
Five research-backed techniques — active recall, mnemonics, elaboration, interleaving, and production — applied to this lesson's vocabulary. Your progress trains a spaced-repetition schedule under the hood.
Force the answer from memory before peeking. The struggle is the workout — that's the testing effect.
Recall from English
they (m.)
Practice exercises
Test what stuck. Multiple-choice and fill-in-the-blank — pulled live from this lesson's vocabulary.
desde
many
durante
mine
tuyo
they (m.)
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