Lesson Transcript

Let's look at the sentence pattern.
Do you remember how the character said,
"She's writing more carefully."
Está escribiendo con más cuidado.
Está escribiendo con más cuidado.
This sentence follows the pattern here:
estar + gerund
"to be + gerund"
The Present Progressive tense indicates actions occurring at the current moment of speech.
To form it, just use a form of estar, which means "to be," followed by the -ing form of a verb in Spanish, known as the gerundio. We will learn how to form the gerund in the next slide.
You'll often hear this pattern when someone is explaining what they or someone else is doing right now.
It's a very common and useful way to talk about what's going on in the present.
Here's how the line from the dialogue uses the pattern.
Está escribiendo con más cuidado.
"She's writing more carefully."
Let's break it down:
Está, the third-person singular form of the verb estar, meaning "she is,"
escribiendo, the gerund of escribir, meaning "writing,"
con, a preposition meaning "with,"
más, meaning "more,"
cuidado, meaning "care" or "carefulness."
Altogether:
Está escribiendo con más cuidado.
"She's writing more carefully."
In the dialogue, we also heard:
En casa, está practicando la ortografía con un cuaderno especial.
"At home, she's practicing spelling with a special notebook."
Here,
En casa, a phrase meaning "at home,"
está, the third-person singular form of estar, meaning "she is,"
practicando, the gerund of practicar, meaning "practicing,"
la ortografía, meaning "spelling,"
con, a preposition meaning "with,"
un cuaderno especial, meaning "a special notebook."
Altogether:
En casa, está practicando la ortografía con un cuaderno especial.
"At home, she's practicing spelling with a special notebook."
As you can see in the table, forming the gerund is easy.
For -ar verbs like practicar, we drop the -ar and add -ando. So, practicar becomes practicando.
For -er and -ir verbs, like escribir, we drop the ending and add -iendo. escribir becomes escribiendo.
There is one small spelling rule to remember. When the stem of an -er or -ir verb ends in a vowel, like in the verb leer (to read), the i of -iendo changes to a y. That's why we say leyendo, not "leiendo." This little change just makes the word easier to say.
Now let's look at some speaking examples.
Estoy leyendo un libro muy interesante.
"I'm reading a very interesting book."
Can you see how the pattern applies here?
Let's break it down:
Estoy, meaning "I am,"
leyendo, the gerund of leer, meaning "reading,"
un libro, meaning "a book,"
muy, meaning "very,"
interesante, meaning "interesting."
Altogether:
Estoy leyendo un libro muy interesante.
"I'm reading a very interesting book."
Here's another example
Mi hermana está cocinando la cena.
"My sister is cooking dinner."
Mi hermana está cocinando la cena.
"My sister is cooking dinner."
Let's try one more,
¿Estás estudiando para el examen?
"Are you studying for the exam?"
¿Estás estudiando para el examen?
"Are you studying for the exam?"
Another one.
Luis y yo estamos viendo una película.
"Luis and I are watching a movie."
Luis y yo estamos viendo una película.
"Luis and I are watching a movie."
One last example.
Los niños están jugando en el parque.
"The kids are playing in the park."
Los niños están jugando en el parque.
"The kids are playing in the park."

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