Barry starts his sentences without knowing whether he is surprised or not.

When I learned Spanish in the 7th grade, I found this really funny. Everybody understands how questions are worded, but the spanish need extra pontuation. Those siestas are getting in the way of learning context, hermanos?
It’s like punctuation for kiddos. Repeat and repeat to learn and always make everything pretty clear, no mysteries
Spanish bros are naturally extra confusing
And even though we do double effort, they call us lazy smh
Thanks to the Spaniards, we can type upside down exclamation- and question marks ¿¡¡¿¿¡¡¿
Let us celebrate this innovation today!
I mean… switch the ones at the bottom, would make more sense
General humor
You’re less German that I expected
I love that thing. In Spanish, it’s not the case that you reach the end of the sentence you’re reading and realize you’ve read it with the wrong intonation.
Jajajajaja…..
¡Jajajajajaja! ¿Quién está listo para la hora de la siesta?
16 comments
¿Qué?
Barry starts his sentences without knowing whether he is surprised or not.

When I learned Spanish in the 7th grade, I found this really funny. Everybody understands how questions are worded, but the spanish need extra pontuation. Those siestas are getting in the way of learning context, hermanos?
It’s like punctuation for kiddos. Repeat and repeat to learn and always make everything pretty clear, no mysteries
Spanish bros are naturally extra confusing
And even though we do double effort, they call us lazy smh
Thanks to the Spaniards, we can type upside down exclamation- and question marks ¿¡¡¿¿¡¡¿
Let us celebrate this innovation today!
I mean… switch the ones at the bottom, would make more sense
General humor
You’re less German that I expected
I love that thing. In Spanish, it’s not the case that you reach the end of the sentence you’re reading and realize you’ve read it with the wrong intonation.
Jajajajaja…..
¡Jajajajajaja! ¿Quién está listo para la hora de la siesta?

¿?
🙃Spanish people when happy🙂
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