Spanish Numbers and Days of the Week PDF
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This document provides a list of Spanish days of the week and the months. It also includes basic Spanish phrases and basic Spanish numbers. Useful for language learners.
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Días de la semana Days of the week lunes- Monday martes- Tuesday miércoles- Wednesday jueves- Thursday viernes- Friday sábado- Saturday domingo- Sunday The months in Spanish January – Enero [eh-neh-ro] February – Febrero [feh-bre-ro] March – Marzo [mar-so] April – Abril [a-bril] May – Mayo...
Días de la semana Days of the week lunes- Monday martes- Tuesday miércoles- Wednesday jueves- Thursday viernes- Friday sábado- Saturday domingo- Sunday The months in Spanish January – Enero [eh-neh-ro] February – Febrero [feh-bre-ro] March – Marzo [mar-so] April – Abril [a-bril] May – Mayo [ma-yo] June – Junio [hu-nio] July – Julio [hu-lio] August – Agosto [a-gos-to] September – Septiembre [sep-tiem-bre] October – Octubre [oc-tu-bre] November – Noviembre [no-viem-bre] December – Diciembre [di-siem-bre] Discover our: Destinations More details Don Quijote Destinations Programs More details Don Quijote Programs Groups More details Don Quijote Groups Student Services More details Don Quijote Student Services Call usPhone Chat with usChat LoginUser en Close Numbers in Spanish Spanish numbers belong to an Indo-Arabic based decimal system, although the history of the number system is much more ancient. The Babylonians used cuneiform writing as observed in the Code of Hammurabi (Babylonian law code) and the Egyptians used hieroglyphs symbols to represent numbers. In Spain, for many centuries the Roman numeration system dominated. In the 8th century, Leonardo de Pisa, who had traveled through the Middle East, introduced the Indo-Arabic system to Europe. In Spain, this numeration system appeared in manuscripts as early as 976 AD. Towards the year 1500, the system was already in place and used clearly in mathematical texts. With the expanding European empires, the number system spread throughout the West, substituting local number systems such as those found in Latin America. One example of this was the very precise Mayan numerical system. The Indo-Arabic numerical system is still used today and is the base of significant scientific development and universal mathematics. One curiosity is the small difference between the Spanish numerical systems and the Anglo-Saxon one. In Spain a billón is one million millions, whereas in the Anglo-Saxon system, a billion is one thousand millions. Spain: Un billón: 1.000.000.000.000 Anglo-Saxons: One billion: 1,000,000,000 Also opposite to the Anglo-Saxon system is the fact that in Spain the “.” symbol is used to separate thousands and “,” to indicate decimals. 3.537,52 € is equal to three thousand five hundred thirty-seven euros and fifty-two cents. SPANISH NUMBERS 1-100 The Spanish numbers are not difficult to learn. Even when there are some exceptions in the way to form them, their construction follows rules that will allow students to learn them easily. Here are the Spanish numbers: 1 - uno 2 - dos 3 - tres 4 - cuatro 5 - cinco 6 - seis 7 - siete 8 - ocho 9 - nueve 10 - diez 11 - once 12 - doce 13 - trece 14 - catorce 15 - quince 16 - dieciséis 17 - diecisiete 18 - dieciocho 19 - diecinueve 20 - veinte SETA Expressions Hola amigo/a -hello Friend. Hola- Hello Como estas? - How are you Como te va- How's it going? Que ta?- What's up? Que pasa?- What's happening? Como esta usted?- How are you? De nada - You're welcome Por Favor - Please Si - Yes Claro. Of course Adios - Good bye Gracias-Thank you hasta mañana- see you tomorow "Buenos: dias - good morning. Buenas tardes - good afternoon Buenas noches good evening como va todo - how's everything Como ha sido tu dia: how was your day? Me pwede a yadar? - Can you help me? Pardon- excuse me? Que hora es? - What time is it? Tambien- also Estoy de acuerdo - I agree Dios mio -Oh, my God Hasta pronto- see you soon Sentencia -sentence. Palabra- word hasta luego - see you later como van las cosas- how are things going Sef B despues - after herida- wound Pequeno- small ayer - yesterday hoy - today mañana - tomorrow esta noche-tonight despidida- goodbye complacer-please caliente- warm/hot ventoso - windy Frio- cold Sol-sunshine nublado doudy niebla - Fog Nieve- show Iluvia- rain con permiso - excuse me bienvenido - welcome Ytu- and you? buendia - good day tienes razon-you're right te equivocas-you're wrong nombre- name genero- gender calle- street Fecha - date tiempo- time enorme- huge Soltero/a-single