¿A que sí?, ¿verdad?, ¿no? Etiquetas de confirmación en tertulias de bar
Etiquetas de confirmación en tertulias de bar: completa 3 réplicas naturales.
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Completa la réplica natural (fútbol en el bar): —Este año el Atleti está fino. —Sí, ____
Correct: 0/6
Hints for this Quiz
We’re looking for a warm, emotional confirmation — stronger than the neutral "¿verdad?".
"¿a que sí?" intensifies agreement: roughly "isn’t it great, though!" — warm, friendly, emotional. In bars, these short confirmation "tails" are part of everyday small talk (compare the typical bar line "¿Qué te pongo?" as a marker of informal closeness).
You need a neutral confirmation, without strong enthusiasm.
"¿verdad?" is a neutral way to ask for confirmation: "right?" / "isn’t it?" It fits a calm statement without much extra emotion.
A short, very general confirmation – like saying "right?".
"¿no?" is the shortest and most frequent little "tail" to check agreement: "right?" / "isn’t that so?" It sounds natural when complaining about prices.
We want a little discourse particle that softens disagreement and sounds natural in Spanish conversation.
"Hombre," is a common spoken marker in Spain used for mild disagreement or surprise, similar to "come on…" or "well, listen…" Then you give your argument.
You need something like "listen, let me explain…" to introduce your opinion.
"Mira," (literally "look") is a discourse marker used to get the other person’s attention before explaining something. Very natural in conversation.
Pick the option that gives the strongest, most enthusiastic agreement.
"¿a que sí?" is used for lively, warm co‑agreement (like "wasn’t it amazing, though?" / "right, it really was!"). "¿verdad?" is more neutral; "¿no?" is the simplest option.
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