Spanish Quiz Nbr. 2 – Lessons 6 – 12

This quiz includes exercises from all topics covered in lessons 6 – 12 (or Compilation Nbr. 2).

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Total amount of points: 75.




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1. Select the correct answer:

Which are the days of the week in Spanish (respect the chronological order and spelling)

 
 
 
 

2. Respecting lower-case and upper-case, as well as punctuation, write down in Spanish:

Today is Monday.

3. Respecting lower-case and upper-case, as well as punctuation, write down in Spanish:

Yesterday was Wednesday.

4. Respecting lower-case and upper-case, as well as punctuation, write down in Spanish:

The day after tomorrow will be Thursday.

5. Using ONLY lower-case letters and no period at the end, write down the following number in Spanish: 43

6. Using ONLY lower-case letters and no period at the end, write down the following number in Spanish: 27

7. Respecting lower-case and upper-case, as well as the correct punctuation, write down in Spanish:

How much do you have? (use the informal “you” that was taught in the lessons)

8. Respecting lower-case and upper-case, as well as the correct punctuation, write down in Spanish:

Who are they?

9. Respecting lower-case and upper-case, as well as the correct punctuation, write down in Spanish:

What is your name? (Use the informal “you” that was taught in the lessons)

10. Respecting lower-case and upper-case, as well as the correct punctuation, write down in Spanish:

I am hungry.

11. Using only lower-case letters and no punctuation mark, write down the Spanish word (verb) that means: there was (Simple Past)

12. Write down the Spanish word (verb) that means: there is (use only lower-case letters and no punctuation mark)

13. Using only lower-case letters and NO punctuation marks, write down the Spanish word (verb) that means: there will be (singular)

14. Taking in consideration upper- and lower-case, and punctuation marks, write down in Spanish: I have a car.

(a car = un auto)

15. Taking in consideration upper- and lower-case, and punctuation marks, write down in Spanish:

I have to eat.






58 COMMENTS

  1. HI, how do I type the tilde? I had a mind blank right when I took the test but could remember alot of the stuff before.

  2. Hi there! its really a great website and im enjoying to learn Spanish from you,youre such a great teacher! ? İ think youre a native spanish speaker.. where are u from??
    Thanks again ?
    Greetings from İstanbul xx

      • yessss its very helpful indeed! i follow it everyday and try to improve my spanish day by day! but well im not that good 😀 but trying my best.i took spanish courses last year but forgetting it as i dont use it on my daily life pff.. so i started from the very beginning with you 😉
        estoy muy agradecido por todo el apoyo..muchas gracias!!! x

        • Hello Canan. I’m glad you have found my Spanish course. Regarding your question, I always found it extremely boring to learn vocabulary. If you feel fine with that, then go ahead. But personally I believe that simply memorizing vocabulary wont stay long in our memory. Our brain works by association. That’s how our neural system is structured. Therefore, I believe it’s more effective to learn new words together with something else. Like in a dialog, or sentences, or grammar lesson. I try to add new words gradually. And I also have some vocabulary lessons where I teach the most relevant and useful words for each letter of the Spanish alphabet: male and females names that begin with… false friend words, adjectives, names of fruits and animlaes, regular and irregular verbs, adverbs,… Take a look at my Spanish lesson Nbr. 152, where I begin with letter A.

          • Hello again and thanks for your answer. I have one more question. I noticed on your videos that you dont pronounce letter C lispily.this is how uruguayans pronounce?

          • Hello Canan. Sorry for taking so long to reply. Remember it’s easier for me to reply messages from YouTube, instead. And I therefore usually reply within the same day. As for your question, the C sound is pronounced the same in all Latin American countries. It’s just pronounced differently (just in some cases; not all) in Spain.

            Greetings

  3. Quiz #2 was very humbling. How do you spell “failure” in Spanish? I’d look it up, but my brain hurts from information overload!

    • I agree. I didn’t do as well as I’d hoped on my first quiz. I was going to jump ahead and try quiz 2, before finishing the video…. but doesn’t sound like I’d do well. 2 hour learning blocks seems so long. Just a suggestion, for future users / future videos. . . maybe try smaller chunks of information. . . 20 to 40 minutes. Thank you, though! These lessons are very helpful

      • Hello Christina. Thanks for your feedback. I know the quizzes are not easy. But since they are not intended to pass or fail the course, I’m trying to push students to their limit, in order to help learn more. They purpose is to make students stop to think of all they have learned, and try do their best. And then review the correction to learn and improve. Take it as an exercise, rather than an exam. Because it’s not an exam 🙂

  4. Hi Rodrigo… In the second quiz 27 is spelled veintisiete (one word) while 43 is three words, cuarenta y tres. Is single word spelling only among the 20s?

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