Dialogue

Lesson Transcript

Do you know how to ask someone to do something in Spanish?
Welcome to Three Step Spanish Practice by SpanishPod101.com. In this lesson, you will practice with verbs in the imperative form.
Let's look at the main dialogue.
Two people are having a conversation.
Bisabuela, enséñame a cocinar comida mexicana.
"Great-grandmother, teach me how to cook Mexican food."
Está bien. Vamos a preparar pozole.
Primero, pon agua en una olla.
"Alright. We're going to make pozole.
First, put water in a pot."
pon agua en una olla
pon
In the sentence, pon is the imperative form of the verb poner, which means "to put."
In Spanish, the imperative mood is used to give direct commands or instructions.
These sentences usually leave out the subject pronoun like tú "you," because the verb form itself shows who is being addressed.
For regular verbs, the imperative form for tú is made by removing the final -s from the present tense second person.
For example, comes, meaning "you eat," becomes come, meaning "eat," and bebes, meaning "you drink," becomes bebe, meaning "drink."
This is a helpful rule for forming informal affirmative commands in Spanish.
Let's use these imperative forms together during this lesson!

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