Learn Spanish online with 

Latin American Spanish

professional teachers

No slang and useful everywhere

Spanish Online GT

Learn Spanish to communicate with your Spanish-speaking patients, at the same time learn Spanish to communicate in daily life.

 

The first thing we have to say from Spanish Online GT is "Thank you." Thank you for taking the time to learn the language of many of your patients, thank you because they must learn the language of the country that has welcomed them, but we must understand them for the reason that they have come to your country due to work problems and no one told them to learn the language of the country that welcomed them.

 

We encourage you to learn the language of many of them, which in this case is Spanish, considering that it is not your obligation, but we would like it to be more like satisfaction and personal improvement.

 

We have designed this program with a combination of grammar topics, vocabulary and phrases that will help you in communicating with these types of patients, so that it will serve you not only in your daily routine as a medical staff, but also in situations of daily life.

 

    You will learn:

  • Ask for the name and personal information of the patient.
  • Gather information about the patient's condition.
  • Make an appointment to your patients.
  • Cardinal numbers.
  • To be in Spanish (ser o estar in Spanish)
  • Differences between ser and estar and other idiomatic verbs that come from the verb to be.
  • Adverbs to describe places and directions.
  • Location (ask for addresses and the location of your patients)
  • Give and ask for the hour (this will help you make appointments with your patients)
  • Describe people, animals or things.
  • Spanish verbs in the present tense.
  • Interrogative and negative sentences.
  • Interrogative words. (How to ask questions in Spanish)
  • Explain to the patient about medication schedules and diets to follow.
  • Regular and irregular verbs of the present tense.
  • Stem changing verbs in the present tense.
  • The simple future. (I´m going to…)
  • Ask the patient for his age and basic information when referring him to a medical record.
  • Nouns in general.
  • Definite and indefinite articles.
  • Internal and external parts of the body.
  • Diseases and symptoms.
  • The past tense.
  • Regular and irregular verbs in the past tense.
  • Stem changing verbs in the past tense.
  • Time expressions.
  • Specific vocabulary to communicate with your Latino patients.

 

Note:

These contents are for students who are starting to learn the Spanish language. If you are intermediate or advanced in Spanish, you and your teacher will agree on the new content.