Lesson 2.1.1 · Las 50 palabras esenciales
🧱 Essential Everyday Words
These ~50 high-frequency words show up in almost every Colombian conversation. Learn them in chunks — verbs, pronouns, time markers, connectors — and you'll understand a huge slice of what's being said around you.
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.
Action verbs you'll hear daily
Colombians lean on a small set of workhorse verbs. Get these into your ear first — most everyday sentences are built on them.
to find
Stem-changing: encuentro, encuentras…
to follow / keep going
Sigo derecho — I keep going straight.
to let / leave (behind)
Déjeme aquí — drop me here.
to carry / take along
to speak
to believe / think
Creo que sí — I think so.
to stay / remain
to seem
Me parece bien — sounds good.
to put / place
to pass / happen
¿Qué pasó? — What happened?
to arrive
to want / love
I/you/he should
Conditional of deber. Softens advice.
Example sentences
Yo encontro todos los días.
I find every day.
¿Quieres seguir conmigo?
Do you want to follow / keep going with me?
Me gusta dejar en la tarde.
I like to let / leave (behind) in the afternoon.
Mini-diálogo
¿Quieres encontrar conmigo?
Do you want to find with me?
Me gusta seguir en la tarde.
I like to follow / keep going in the afternoon.
People & pronouns
Colombian Spanish leans heavily on usted, but you still need yo, ella, nosotros to talk about who's doing what.
I
she
we / us
the man
Example sentences
Hoy estoy yo.
Today I feel I.
Mi amigo es muy ella.
My friend is very she.
La comida está nosotros.
The food is we / us.
Mini-diálogo
Mi amigo es muy yo.
My friend is very I.
La comida está ella.
The food is she.
Time & sequence
These markers tell people when things happen — essential for stories, plans, and excuses.
always
now
Ahorita can mean 'in a sec' OR 'much later' — context decides.
after / later
then / afterwards
so / then
Filler word — Colombians use it constantly.
the day
the year
time / weather
life
¡Así es la vida! — That's life.
first
until / even
Hasta luego — see you later.
Example sentences
Hoy estoy siempre.
Today I feel always.
Mi amigo es muy ahora.
My friend is very now.
La comida está después.
The food is after / later.
Mini-diálogo
Mi amigo es muy siempre.
My friend is very always.
La comida está ahora.
The food is now.
Quantity, size & comparison
How Colombians measure, compare, and exaggerate.
one
two
each / every
less / minus
little / few
Un poquito — a little bit (very Paisa).
so much / so many
large / big
new
same / -self
Yo mismo — I myself.
Example sentences
Tengo uno libros.
I have one books.
Son dos en total.
That's two in total.
La comida está cada.
The food is each / every.
Mini-diálogo
Son uno en total.
That's one in total.
Quiero dos, por favor.
I want two, please.
Connectors & little words
Tiny words that glue sentences together. Miss them and conversations feel choppy.
yes
well / fine
like that / this way
¿Cómo así? — Wait, what?
also / too
nor / not even
Ni idea — no clue.
nothing
where
between / among
of / from
that
¡Eso! — Yes! That's it!
our
thing
part
Example sentences
Hoy estoy sí.
Today I feel yes.
Mi amigo es muy bien.
My friend is very well / fine.
La comida está así.
The food is like that / this way.
Mini-diálogo
Mi amigo es muy sí.
My friend is very yes.
La comida está bien.
The food is well / fine.
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
little / few
Practice exercises
Test what stuck. Multiple-choice and fill-in-the-blank — pulled live from this lesson's vocabulary.
querer
to carry / take along
bien
donde
ni
to believe / think
Fill the blank
Me gusta _____ en la tarde.
I like to let / leave (behind) in the afternoon.
Fill the blank
Tengo _____ libros.
I have one books.
Más lecciones