Spanish for Beginners

Your first steps in Spanish

Progress Page 1 of 5

Why Spanish is easier than you think

Spanish is a Romance language spoken by more than 500 million people worldwide. Like English, it has clear rules and patterns. The biggest advantage? Spanish pronunciation is very consistent β€” each letter almost always makes the same sound!

The language has 27 letters (including Γ±) and stress follows clear rules: words ending in a vowel, -n, or -s are stressed on the second-to-last syllable; others on the last. Accent marks show exceptions.

Spanish verbs follow three main patterns (-ar, -er, -ir), and if you know one pattern, you can recognise hundreds of verbs. Perfect for reading simple texts!

Key tips:

  • β€’ The letter Γ± is unique to Spanish (like niΓ±o = child)
  • β€’ H is always silent in Spanish (hola = ola)
  • β€’ Double rr is a strong rolling sound (perro vs pero)
  • β€’ Question marks and exclamation marks go on both sides (ΒΏ? Β‘!)
Chapter 1

The Spanish Alphabet & Sounds

The basics of pronunciation

Spanish has 27 letters. Pronunciation is much more consistent than in English β€” what you see is what you get!

Important sound combinations

Single vs Double β€” Important differences!

In Spanish, only rr, ll, cc, and nn occur as doubles. RR is especially important:

Accents β€” When and why

Chapter 2

Greetings & Essential Phrases

The basis of every conversation

These words and phrases appear in every Spanish story. They are the building blocks of social interaction.

Greetings throughout the day

Buenos dΓ­as β†’ Good morning (Until ~14:00) Formal & informal
Buenas tardes β†’ Good afternoon/evening (14:00–20:00) Formal & informal
Buenas noches β†’ Good evening/night (After 20:00) Formal & informal
Hola β†’ Hello (All day) Informal
Buenos β†’ Hi (short) (All day) Very informal
Buenas β†’ Hi (short) (All day) Casual greeting

How are you? β€” Questions

ΒΏCΓ³mo estΓ‘s? β†’ How are you? (Personal) Informal (tΓΊ)
ΒΏCΓ³mo estΓ‘? β†’ How are you? (formal) (Personal) Formal (usted)
ΒΏQuΓ© tal? β†’ How is it going? (General) Informal
ΒΏCΓ³mo te va? β†’ How are things going for you? (Personal) Informal
ΒΏCΓ³mo andas? β†’ How are you doing? (Casual) Very informal
ΒΏTodo bien? β†’ Everything good? (Quick check) Informal
ΒΏQuΓ© pasa? β†’ What is going on? (Very casual) Informal

How are you? β€” Answers

Bien, gracias β†’ Good, thank you (Standard positive) Universal
Muy bien, gracias β†’ Very good, thank you (Extra positive) Universal
Β‘Excelente! β†’ Excellent! (Very enthusiastic) Informal
Regular β†’ So-so (Neutral) Informal
MΓ‘s o menos β†’ More or less (Mixed) Informal
Bastante bien β†’ Pretty good (Moderately positive) Universal
Mal β†’ Bad (Negative) Universal
No muy bien β†’ Not very well (Mildly negative) Universal
Todo bien β†’ Everything is fine (All is well) Universal
AhΓ­ vamos β†’ We are getting by (Getting through) Informal
ΒΏY tΓΊ? β†’ And you? (Ask back) Informal
ΒΏY usted? β†’ And you? (formal) (Ask back) Formal

Saying goodbye

AdiΓ³s β†’ Goodbye
Hasta luego β†’ See you later
Hasta pronto β†’ See you soon
Hasta maΓ±ana β†’ See you tomorrow
Nos vemos β†’ See you
Chao/Chau β†’ Bye
Hasta la vista β†’ Until we meet again

Polite forms β€” Essential!

Por favor β†’ Please
πŸ’‘ Always use for requests
Gracias β†’ Thank you
πŸ’‘ Universal and always appropriate
Muchas gracias β†’ Thank you very much
πŸ’‘ Extra gratitude
De nada β†’ You are welcome
πŸ’‘ Standard reply to gracias
Por nada β†’ No problem
πŸ’‘ Alternative to de nada
Disculpe β†’ Excuse me (formal)
πŸ’‘ Formal β€” to get attention
Disculpa β†’ Sorry (informal)
πŸ’‘ Informal β€” apologies
PerdΓ³n β†’ Sorry/Excuse me
πŸ’‘ Quick apology or to get attention
Lo siento β†’ I am sorry
πŸ’‘ Genuine apologies/condolences
Con permiso β†’ Excuse me/May I pass?
πŸ’‘ When you want to get by

Important responses

SΓ­ β†’ Yes (Note the accent!)
No β†’ No (Simple and clear)
No sΓ© β†’ I do not know (Very useful!)
QuizΓ‘s/Tal vez β†’ Maybe (Both are common)
Claro β†’ Of course (KLAH-roh)
Por supuesto β†’ Of course (More formal)
Vale β†’ Okay (Very common in Spain)
De acuerdo β†’ Agreed (deh ah-KWEHR-doh)
Chapter 3

Ser & Estar β€” Two ways to say "to be"

The most important verbs in Spanish

Spanish has TWO verbs for "to be": SER for permanent characteristics and ESTAR for temporary states and locations.

SER β€” Permanent characteristics

ESTAR β€” Location & temporary states

Common expressions with ser/estar

Hay β†’ There is/are
Hay un problema - There is a problem
ΒΏCΓ³mo eres? β†’ What are you like? (Character (ser))
ΒΏCΓ³mo estΓ‘s? β†’ How are you? (Current state (estar))
Soy de... β†’ I am from...
Soy de Madrid - I am from Madrid
Estoy en... β†’ I am in...
Estoy en EspaΓ±a - I am in Spain
Es verdad β†’ It is true (Confirmation)
EstΓ‘ bien β†’ It is okay (Agreement)
Es importante β†’ It is important (Emphasis)

Practice sentences β€” Spot the pattern

El libro estΓ‘ en la mesa β†’ The book is on the table
La paella es buena β†’ The paella is good
Los niΓ±os estΓ‘n en la escuela β†’ The children are at school
ΒΏDΓ³nde estΓ‘s? β†’ Where are you?
Somos espaΓ±oles β†’ We are Spanish
No estoy seguro β†’ I am not sure
Globe mascot holding a newspaper

Love For Languages Newsletter

Never miss a new story or blog post again!

Sign up for our monthly newsletter and never miss the release of a new story or blog post. Once a month we will send you a newsletter full of language learning tips and an overview of all stories and book chapters that have been published.

View previous newsletters