/ESP/ HILO ESPA;OL

que hacen hoy mis nenes

Un poco de todo, y tu?

...

cheee galiciannnnnnnn

viendo una telenovela... :/

NOOOO NO EA CIERTO AAJSSKKSKSKS

Devuelvan lo que robaron

Está por aquí mi novia? Le he buscado ropita.

>vosotros
was it autism?

empece un tutorial de unity

hi /esp/ sorry for shitting up this thread but i have a very important question about answering questions in the affirmative .

Lets say someone asks:

Limpiaste bien los cuartos?

the answer would be: si, los ya he limpiado OR would it be ya los he limpiado?

Where does the lo/los go? I thought you could never separate ya and he (always need ya he ____)

Si, ya los he limpiado

muchas gracias bby

¡Tomaremos nuestro LORO por la fuerza!

Loros podemos daros unos cuantos, de las Canarias y esos sitios.

El oro se lo está gastando Putin en alcohol.

La zorra de mi novia no ha aparecido por el hilo hoy, cuando la vea se va a llevar un buen castigo.

che encontre a forofgold haciendo hilos en cubierto en un foro

Pasa link

nah es de hace meses y ya le banearon o se borro la cuenta solo queda la historia de que estaba obsesionado con haruhi y es bastante coñazo

todos zurdos putos

puto putín

Es culpa de los comunistas de mierda. Franco debió reventarles el culo mucho antes.

La segunda república era una puta broma de mal gusto.

che que asco cuando te ponen un ban

ya estoy cari... sorry que me pusieron un ban por reirme de los mods jiji
autism is sticking to 15th century speech meant for peasents and inferiors
>usted
thanks for respecting your superiors tho

do yous guys not use usted at all with anyone?

in very formal occasions yes
for example if you get a call from someone trying to sell you something they will use "usted"
politicians use "usted"
but even with people you dont know, "Tu" is usually more prevalent unless its a really formal / respectful thing

so, you walk into your office and you address your jefe.... do you use tu or usted?
how about during a job interview?

probably "usted" in both situations, unless you have a friendly relationship with your boss or he preffers a more direct interaction

it's usually used with old people to speak more formally, it's accompanied by a more formal way of speaking, i don't know if it's some special conjugation or what

i have never worked but i wouldn't directly say the word 'usted' because that'd make me feel like a slave, i'd still use the formal language but without saying usted


>how about during a job interview
start with the usted treatment and they'll probably tell you to talk from tu to tu (de tu a tu, to both use tu)

hola a espana. como estas? como me consigo una novia de espana?

LA DIVISIÒN AZUL PHANTASMAS GRACIAS

...