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The Spanish Grammar, by Miguel
Grammar
New Edition

  Pronounciation
  Spelling
  Determinant-Article
  The Nouns
  The Adjectives
  Adjective-Comparison
  Adjective-Demonstrative
  Adjective-Distributive
  Adjective-Quantitative
  Adjectives-Interrogative
  Adjective-Possessive
  Adjective-Origin
  Adjective-Numeral
  The Time
  The Date
  The Pronouns
  Direct/Indirect Pronouns
  Demonstrative Pronouns
  Relative Pronous
  Reflexive pronouns
  Possessive Pronouns
  The Adverbs
  Degree of Adverbs
  Adverbials
  Prepositions
  Conjunctions
  Interjections
  Regular Verbs
  Irregular Verbs
  Stem-Changing Verbs
  The Progressive


0:c1

In Spanish is not used ordinal numbers to say a date. You must use cardinals numbers.

Hoy es el 22 de julio./Today is the 22nd of July.

To inquire as to the date you can use one of this forms:

¿Qué fecha es?
¿Cuál es la fecha de hoy?
¿A cuántos estamos hoy?
¿Qué día es hoy?
¿A qué fecha estamos?
¿A cuántos estamos?

Like the days of the week, the months are not capitalised.


The Spanish days of the week are:

lunes/Monday
martes/Tuesday
miércoles/Wednesday
jueves/Thursday
viernes/Friday
sábado/Saturday
domingo/Sunday

Spanish people consider Monday the first day of the week.


The months of the year are:

enero/January
febrero/February
marzo/March
abril/April
mayo/May
junio/June
julio/July
agosto/August
septiembre/September
octubre/October
noviembre/November
diciembre/December


These are the four seasons (estaciones):

primavera/spring
verano/summer
otoño/autumn (U.K.) fall (USA)
invierno/winter


Spanish people always use this order for the dates with numbers: day/month/year

23/02/2002 (more used) 23.02.2002 (less used).


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