greatSchism wrote:Advanced vocab list on Spanishdict.com: 443/1000.
I feel like an amateur now, but I somehow had no idea these lists existed despite using spanishdict every day. Thanks for this!
greatSchism wrote:Advanced vocab list on Spanishdict.com: 443/1000.
AllSubNoDub wrote:greatSchism wrote:Advanced vocab list on Spanishdict.com: 443/1000.
I feel like an amateur now, but I somehow had no idea these lists existed despite using spanishdict every day. Thanks for this!
greatSchism wrote:AllSubNoDub wrote:greatSchism wrote:Advanced vocab list on Spanishdict.com: 443/1000.
I feel like an amateur now, but I somehow had no idea these lists existed despite using spanishdict every day. Thanks for this!
https://www.spanishdict.com/lists/506021/advanced
I would not consider all of the words on the list advanced, such as bilingüe, Nicaragua, ni, Guatemala, and many more. Many of the words seem to be filler. But, I use the app on the iPhone and I love being able to do the vocabulary list hands-free.
AllSubNoDub wrote:greatSchism wrote:AllSubNoDub wrote:greatSchism wrote:Advanced vocab list on Spanishdict.com: 443/1000.
I feel like an amateur now, but I somehow had no idea these lists existed despite using spanishdict every day. Thanks for this!
https://www.spanishdict.com/lists/506021/advanced
I would not consider all of the words on the list advanced, such as bilingüe, Nicaragua, ni, Guatemala, and many more. Many of the words seem to be filler. But, I use the app on the iPhone and I love being able to do the vocabulary list hands-free.
Yeah, there's something relaxing about going through the UI. I usually grind sentence cards in Anki, which is brutal (but makes me feel very satisfied at the end of the day when I see no cards due). These are kind of fund little "snacks" instead.
I was actually referring to the thematic lists. I can see them being useful for picking up quick vocab in areas that I don't have much reading interest in, e.g. business, sports, etc. Funny that the CEFR tests don't focus on stuff that I am interested in (like science), so I can see lists like these being useful for quickly reviewing and rounding off your knowledge for testing purposes.
greatSchism wrote:“Qué tal les pareció”, I want to say “Qué les pareció.”
AllSubNoDub wrote:I was actually referring to the thematic lists. I can see them being useful for picking up quick vocab in areas that I don't have much reading interest in, e.g. business, sports, etc. Funny that the CEFR tests don't focus on stuff that I am interested in (like science), so I can see lists like these being useful for quickly reviewing and rounding off your knowledge for testing purposes.