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How Much Do You Remember From Spanish Class?

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Question 1

What Does "Hola" Mean?

Question 1

Choose the Correct Translation for "Thank You. "

Question 1

What Is the Spanish Word for "Please"?

Question 1

Pick the Right Word for "Goodbye. "

Question 1

How Do You Say "Good Morning" in Spanish?

Question 1

Translate "Good Night. "

Question 1

What Is "Sí" in English?

Question 1

Choose the Opposite of "Sí."

Question 1

Which Word Means "Excuse Me" to Get Someone’s Attention?

Question 1

What’s the Spanish Word for "Water"?

Question 1

Select the Correct Translation of "I Am. "

Question 1

How Do You Say "I Don’t Understand"?

Question 1

Which One Means "Where? " in Spanish?

Question 1

Translate "How Are You? " (Informal).

Question 1

Pick the Word for "Friend" (Male).

Question 1

Which Phrase Means "See You Tomorrow"?

Question 1

Choose the Number "Twenty-One. "

Question 1

What Does "Muy Bien" Mean?

Question 1

Translate "Book. "

Question 1

What’s the Word for "School"?

Question 1

How Do You Say "I’m Sorry" Politely?

Question 1

Pick the Translation for "Bathroom. "

Question 1

Which Word Means "Teacher" (Female)?

Question 1

Translate "Dog. "

Question 1

What’s the Spanish for "I Need Help"?

Question 1

Choose the Correct Word for "Door. "

Question 1

Translate "My Name Is…"

Question 1

Which One Means "Sometimes"?

Question 1

What Is the Word for "Because"?

Question 1

Choose the Spanish Word for "Breakfast. "

Question 1

What Does "Bueno" Mean?

Question 1

Pick the Correct Translation for "House. "

Question 1

How Do You Say "Cat" in Spanish?

Question 1

Choose the Right Word for "Family. "

Question 1

What’s the Spanish for "Blue"?

Question 1

Select the Number "Thirty. "

Question 1

How Do You Say "Teacher" (Male)?

Question 1

Pick the Correct Translation for "City. "

Question 1

Choose the Spanish Word for "Summer. "

Question 1

What Does "Feliz" Mean?

Question 1

Translate "My Mother. "

Question 1

Choose the Right Word for "Car. "

Question 1

How Do You Say "I’m Hungry"?

Question 1

Pick the Correct Translation for "Coffee. "

Question 1

What’s the Spanish Word for "Beach"?

Question 1

Choose the Translation for "Monday. "

Question 1

How Do You Say "I Want Water," Informally?

Question 1

Select the Correct Word for "Window. "

Question 1

Pick the Spanish for "Library. "

Question 1

What Does "Frío" Mean?

Question 1

Choose the Correct Translation for "Two Sisters. "

Question 1

How Do You Say "Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner" in Order?

Question 1

Pick the Correct Translation for "Pen. "

Question 1

What’s the Spanish Word for "Green"?

Question 1

Choose the Translation for "Good Afternoon. "

Question 1

How Do You Say "I Am From Canada"?

Question 1

Pick the Correct Word for "Happy Birthday! "

Question 1

Choose the Spanish for "Apple. "

Question 1

What Does "Silla" Mean?

Question 1

How Do You Say "I’m Tired" (Male Speaker)?

Question 1

Pick the Correct Translation for "Bread. "

Question 1

Choose the Word for "Shoes. "

Question 1

Translate "Good Luck! "

Question 1

Pick the Correct Translation for "I Have a Question. "

Question 1

Choose the Word for "Breakfast Is Ready. "

Question 1

How Do You Say "Where Is the Bank? "

Question 1

Pick the Correct Translation for "Red. "

Question 1

Choose the Word for "Morning. "

Question 1

How Do You Say "I Like Music"?

Question 1

Select the Correct Translation for "Dog Is Big. "

Question 1

Choose the Spanish for "Please Speak Slower. "

Question 1

Choose the Correct Translation for "Table. "

Question 1

Pick the Correct Word for "Weather. "

Question 1

How Do You Say "See You Later"?

Question 1

Choose the Translation for "Excuse Me" (To Pass By).

Question 1

What’s the Spanish Word for "Bus"?

Question 1

Pick the Correct Translation for "I Live in Chicago. "

Question 1

Choose the Word for "Hospital Nurse" (Female).

Question 1

How Do You Say "Where Are You From? " (Informal)?

Question 1

Translate "There Is a Bathroom. "

Question 1

Choose the Spanish for "Sports. "

Question 1

What Does "Rápido" Mean?

Question 1

Pick the Correct Translation for "Small. "

Question 1

How Do You Say "I Need a Doctor"?

Question 1

Choose the Word for "Breakfast Menu. "

Question 1

What’s the Spanish for "Left" (Direction)?

Question 1

Pick the Correct Translation for "I’m Fine, Thanks. "

Question 1

Choose the Word for "Keys. "

Question 1

How Do You Say "I Don’t Know"?

Question 1

Select the Correct Translation for "Happy New Year! "

1
Please
2
Goodbye
3
Thanks
4
Hello

This greeting means "hello" in Spanish and is used in both formal and informal contexts everywhere.
1
Adiós
2
Por favor
3
Gracias
4
De nada

“Gracias” is the standard way to say “thank you” across Spanish-speaking countries in everyday interactions.
1
Por favor
2
Lo siento
3
Bienvenido
4
Buenas noches

“Por favor” is the polite expression for “please,” commonly used before or after a request.
1
Hola
2
Gracias
3
Mañana
4
Adiós

“Adiós” is the standard farewell in Spanish, appropriate in casual and formal situations alike.
1
Buenas tardes
2
Buenos días
3
Buen día
4
Buenas noches

“Buenos días” is used until midday to greet someone politely and warmly in Spanish-speaking communities.
1
Hasta mañana
2
Buenas noches
3
Buenos días
4
Buenas tardes

“Buenas noches” is used for nighttime greetings and when saying goodbye in the evening or before sleeping.
1
Yes
2
Maybe
3
Later
4
No

“Sí,” with an accent, means “yes”; without the accent, “si” means “if,” which is different.
1
No
2
Tampoco
3
Nunca
4
Jamás

“No” is the direct opposite of “sí,” making it the simplest negation in Spanish.
1
Perdón
2
Ayuda
3
Salud
4
Silencio

“Perdón” works for “excuse me” or “sorry,” especially when lightly interrupting or apologizing for small mistakes.
1
Agua
2
Té
3
Leche
4
Jugo

“Agua” is a feminine noun taking the masculine article “el” in singular: “el agua” for sound reasons.
1
Eres
2
Soy
3
Es
4
Estoy

“Soy” is the first-person singular form of “ser,” used for identity, origin, and inherent characteristics.
1
No hablo
2
No entiendo
3
No sé
4
No puedo

“No entiendo” literally means “I don’t understand,” helpful in conversations when clarification is needed.
1
¿Qué?
2
¿Cuándo?
3
¿Dónde?
4
¿Quién?

“¿Dónde?” asks about location, equivalent to “where?” and regularly pairs with “está” for places.
1
¿Cómo estás?
2
¿Cómo está?
3
¿Qué tal está usted?
4
¿Cómo sois?

“¿Cómo estás?” uses the informal “tú” form, commonly used with friends, peers, and family.
1
Amistad
2
Amigues
3
Amiga
4
Amigo

“Amigo” is masculine; “amiga” is the feminine counterpart describing a female friend.
1
Hasta pronto
2
Hasta mañana
3
Hasta luego
4
Nos vemos hoy

“Hasta mañana” literally translates to “until tomorrow,” used to confirm you’ll see someone the next day.
1
Ventidós
2
Veinte y uno
3
Veintiuno
4
Veintiuna

“Veintiuno” is the standard form; it becomes “veintiún” before masculine nouns and “veintiuna” before feminine.
1
Not sure
2
So-so
3
Very well
4
Too bad

“Muy bien” intensifies “bien,” indicating that something is going very well or someone feels very good.
1
Mesa
2
Cuadro
3
Libro
4
Silla

“Libro” is a masculine noun meaning “book,” commonly used in classroom vocabulary contexts.
1
Escuela
2
Teatro
3
Hospital
4
Biblioteca

“Escuela” means “school,” while “biblioteca” is “library,” and they are frequently confused by beginners.
1
De nada
2
Mucho gusto
3
Lo siento
4
Con permiso

“Lo siento” expresses regret or apology, whereas “con permiso” is for passing by politely.
1
Cocina
2
Dormitorio
3
Sala
4
Baño

“Baño” is the common term for bathroom; in some regions, “servicio” or “aseo” may appear.
1
Maestro
2
Estudiante
3
Profesor
4
Profesora

“Profesora” is the feminine form; “profesor” is masculine, both used widely in schools and universities.
1
Pájaro
2
Perro
3
Caballo
4
Gato

“Perro” is dog, while “gato” is cat; both are foundational animal vocabulary terms.
1
Necesito ayuda
2
Quiero ayuda
3
Busco ayuda
4
Tengo ayuda

“Necesito ayuda” directly expresses a need for help, useful in emergencies or confusing situations.
1
Ventana
2
Puerta
3
Piso
4
Pared

“Puerta” is “door,” while “ventana” means “window,” both common in classroom descriptions.
1
Mi llamo…
2
Me llamo…
3
Me llama…
4
Yo llamo…

“Me llamo…” literally means “I call myself,” the standard way to introduce your name in Spanish.
1
Siempre
2
Jamás
3
Nunca
4
A veces

“A veces” translates to “sometimes,” expressing occasional frequency between “siempre” always and “nunca” never.
1
Por qué
2
Porqué
3
Por que
4
Porque

“Porque” means “because”; “por qué” asks “why,” and “porqué” is a noun meaning “reason.”
1
Almuerzo
2
Merienda
3
Cena
4
Desayuno

“Desayuno” is breakfast, the morning meal; “almuerzo” is lunch, “cena” dinner, and “merienda” afternoon snack.
1
Good
2
Slow
3
Tall
4
Bad

“Bueno” is the common adjective for “good,” used with nouns or after ser to describe quality.
1
Casa
2
Calle
3
Caro
4
Caso

“Casa” means house or home; it’s a very common beginner vocabulary word.
1
Perro
2
Pájaro
3
Gato
4
Pez

“Gato” is cat; “perro” is dog; “pájaro” is bird; “pez” is fish in water.
1
Trabajo
2
Fiesta
3
Amistad
4
Familia

“Familia” means family, the group of relatives; it’s a frequent feminine noun ending in -a.
1
Azul
2
Rojo
3
Amarillo
4
Verde

“Azul” is blue; it doesn’t change for gender, but the plural adds -es: “azules.”
1
Trece
2
Treinta y uno
3
Treinta
4
Treintena

“Treinta” is thirty; “trece” is thirteen, and “treinta y uno” is thirty-one for counting.
1
Director
2
Profesor
3
Estudiante
4
Profesora

“Profesor” is the masculine form; “profesora” is the feminine form for a female teacher.
1
Calle
2
Ciudad
3
Campo
4
Pueblo

“Ciudad” means city; “pueblo” is town, “campo” countryside, and “calle” street.
1
Verano
2
Otoño
3
Primavera
4
Invierno

“Verano” is summer; the seasons are usually masculine: el verano, el invierno, el otoño, la primavera.
1
Busy
2
Happy
3
Tired
4
Angry

“Feliz” means happy; its plural is “felices,” changing z to c before the -es ending.
1
Mi madre
2
Mí madre
3
Mis madre
4
Mi madres

“Mi” is singular possessive; with plural nouns use “mis,” so “mi madre” is correct here.
1
Barco
2
Bicicleta
3
Tren
4
Coche

“Coche” (also “carro” in many regions) means car; the others are bicycle, train, and boat.
1
Estoy hambre
2
Hago hambre
3
Tengo hambre
4
Soy hambre

Spanish uses “tener” for physical states; “tengo hambre” literally means “I have hunger.”
1
Leche
2
Té
3
Café
4
Jugo

“Café” is coffee; the accent mark indicates stress on the final syllable.
1
Río
2
Mar
3
Lago
4
Playa

“Playa” is beach; “lago” lake, “río” river, and “mar” sea or ocean.
1
Martes
2
Lunes
3
Jueves
4
Domingo

“Lunes” is Monday; Spanish days are lowercase and usually masculine: el lunes.
1
Quiero agua
2
Quiero el agua, por favor
3
Queremos agua
4
Quieres agua

“Quiero” is first-person singular of “querer”; “quiero agua” is a simple, polite request.
1
Ventana
2
Piso
3
Puerta
4
Techo

“Ventana” means window; “puerta” door, “techo” ceiling or roof, and “piso” floor.
1
Librería
2
Lectura
3
Libro
4
Biblioteca

“Biblioteca” is library; “librería” is bookstore, which is a common false friend.
1
Windy
2
Warm
3
Cold
4
Hot

“Frío” is cold; weather expressions often use “hace”: “hace frío” means “it’s cold.”
1
Dos hermanas
2
Dos hermana
3
Dos hermanes
4
Dos hermanos

“Hermana” is sister; the plural feminine ends with -as, so “dos hermanas” is right.
1
Almuerzo, desayuno, cena
2
Desayuno, almuerzo, cena
3
Desayuno, cena, almuerzo
4
Cena, desayuno, almuerzo

Spanish mealtimes usually follow desayuno, almuerzo, and cena, matching morning, midday, and evening meals.
1
Lápiz
2
Bolígrafo
3
Borrador
4
Cuaderno

“Bolígrafo” is pen; “lápiz” pencil, “cuaderno” notebook, and “borrador” eraser.
1
Verde
2
Blanco
3
Marrón
4
Negro

“Verde” is green; in phrases, adjectives usually follow the noun in Spanish.
1
Buenas noches
2
Buenos días
3
Buenas tardes
4
Buenas tardes, señoritas

“Buenas tardes” is the standard greeting for afternoon; it’s plural feminine in form.
1
Estoy de Canadá
2
Estoy en Canadá de
3
Soy en Canadá
4
Soy de Canadá

Origin uses “ser de,” so “soy de Canadá” clearly states where you are from.
1
¡Feliz cumpleaños!
2
¡Buen cumpleaños!
3
¡Buenos cumpleaños!
4
¡Feliz cumpleaño!

“¡Feliz cumpleaños!” is the standard phrase; remember the plural “cumpleaños” for “birthday.”
1
Uva
2
Plátano
3
Naranja
4
Manzana

“Manzana” means apple; the others are orange, banana, and grape respectively.
1
Window
2
Chair
3
Table
4
Bed

“Silla” is the everyday word for chair, common classroom vocabulary alongside mesa (table) in Spanish lessons.
1
Estoy cansado
2
Soy cansado
3
Estoy cansada
4
Soy cansada

Use “estar” for temporary states; a masculine speaker uses “cansado” ending with -o.
1
Carne
2
Queso
3
Arroz
4
Pan

“Pan” is bread; “queso” cheese, “carne” meat, and “arroz” rice.
1
Camisa
2
Sombrero
3
Zapatos
4
Calcetines

“Zapatos” means shoes; “calcetines” socks, “camisa” shirt, and “sombrero” hat.
1
¡Buenas suertes!
2
¡Buena suerte!
3
¡Suerte buena!
4
¡Buen suerte!

“¡Buena suerte!” is the fixed expression for wishing someone luck in Spanish.
1
Tengo una pregunta
2
Tengo la pregunta
3
Tengo un pregunta
4
Tiene una pregunta

“Pregunta” is feminine, so use “una”; “tengo una pregunta” is polite and common.
1
Desayuno está listo
2
El desayuno es listo
3
La desayuno está lista
4
El desayuno está listo

Food being ready uses “estar”; “el desayuno está listo” communicates readiness.
1
¿Dónde está banco?
2
¿Dónde banco está?
3
¿Dónde es el banco?
4
¿Dónde está el banco?

Location questions use “estar”; include the article: “el banco” for the specific bank.
1
Morado
2
Rosa
3
Gris
4
Rojo

“Rojo” means red; remember it agrees in gender and number with the noun it describes.
1
Mañana
2
Noche
3
Ayer
4
Tarde

“Mañana” means morning; context determines whether it means “morning” or “tomorrow.”
1
Me gusto la música
2
Me gusta música la
3
Yo gusto música
4
Me gusta la música

The “gustar” construction uses an indirect object; “me gusta la música” is idiomatic.
1
El perro está grande
2
El perro es grande
3
El perro grande es
4
Perro es grande

Describing a general characteristic uses “ser”; include the article: “el perro es grande.”
1
Por favor, habla más rápido
2
Por favor, escucha más despacio
3
Por favor, hable más despacio
4
Por favor, habla más alto

“Más despacio” means slower; “hable” is a polite usted command used in many situations.
1
Silla
2
Mesa
3
Puerta
4
Ventana

“Mesa” means table, while “silla” is chair, “ventana” is window, and “puerta” means door.
1
Clima
2
Hora
3
Reloj
4
Tiempo

“Tiempo” often means weather in everyday speech; “clima” appears more in formal or scientific contexts.
1
Hasta pronto mismo
2
Hasta luego
3
Hasta ayer
4
Hasta nunca

“Hasta luego” is the common friendly farewell meaning “see you later.”
1
Perdóname por favor
2
Con permiso
3
Disculpas son
4
Lo siento

“Con permiso” is used when passing by people politely in crowds or tight spaces.
1
Autobús
2
Coche
3
Barco
4
Avión

“Autobús” is bus; the others are airplane, car, and boat respectively.
1
Vivo a Chicago
2
Vives en Chicago
3
Vivo en Chicago
4
Yo vivo a Chicago

Residence uses “vivir en”; the preposition “en” indicates location without movement.
1
Doctora
2
Enfermera
3
Paciente
4
Médico

“Enfermera” is female nurse; “enfermero” is male nurse; “doctora” is female doctor.
1
¿Dónde tú eres?
2
¿De dónde es?
3
¿De dónde eres?
4
¿Eres de dónde?

Origin questions use “de dónde” with “ser”; the informal “tú” form is “eres.”
1
Tiene un baño
2
Hay un baño
3
Es un baño
4
Está un baño

“Hay” indicates existence or presence of something unspecified: “hay un baño.”
1
Deportes
2
Clase
3
Deporteses
4
Juegos

“Deportes” means sports; it’s a masculine plural noun commonly used with “los.”
1
Slow
2
Quiet
3
Fast
4
Loud

“Rápido” means fast or quick; the adverb can be “rápido” or “rápidamente.”
1
Grande
2
Ancho
3
Largo
4
Pequeño

“Pequeño” means small; it agrees with gender and number: pequeña, pequeños, pequeñas.
1
Necesita un médico
2
Necesito una médica
3
Necesito el médico
4
Necesito un médico

A general request uses the indefinite article; “necesito un médico” works for urgent help.
1
Menú de desayuno
2
Menú del desayunar
3
Menú para desayunos
4
Menú por desayuno

“Menú de desayuno” is the natural phrasing, using “de” to link related nouns.
1
Derecha
2
Abajo
3
Izquierda
4
Arriba

“Izquierda” is left; “derecha” right; “arriba” up; “abajo” down.
1
Estoy bien, gracias
2
Estoy bueno, gracias
3
Soy bueno, gracias
4
Soy bien, gracias

General well-being uses “estar”; “estoy bien, gracias” is the standard polite response.
1
Puertas
2
Letras
3
Llaves
4
Mesas

“Llaves” are keys; the double “ll” is typically pronounced like a “y” sound in many regions.
1
No sabe
2
Yo no saber
3
No sé
4
No conozco

First-person singular of “saber” is “sé”; “no sé” is concise and very common.
1
¡Feliz Nuevo Año!
2
¡Feliz Año Nuevo!
3
¡Feliz Año Nueva!
4
¡Feliz Año Nuevo, amigos mías!

The fixed holiday greeting is “¡Feliz Año Nuevo!”, with “Año Nuevo” capitalized as the holiday name.
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Did all those Spanish classes stick, or did most of it vanish after the final exam? This quiz will test your memory of vocab, grammar, and everyday phrases. ¡Vamos! See how much you really remember from Spanish class.

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