Spanish Vocabulary Builder for Near Fluent Spanish Learners
This the fourth book in the Spanish Frequency Dictionary series.
This book will allow you to become fluent in the language. You will grow your vocabulary from roughly CEFR C1+ up to C2 Spanish vocabulary, and beyond,.
This dictionary is for advanced students who want to master the language.
If you know the 10.000 used words in Spanish, you will have a vocabulary equal to a grown-up native speaker who finished college or university.
You can speak Spanish fluently and express yourself with ease. You can deal with academic or cognitively taxing material.
You can use the Spanish language to a near-native effect, depending on your grammar skills. Your Spanish is at a level that may, in certain aspects, be more advanced than that of an average native speaker.
In technical terms: you will understand 98% of all spoken Spanish and 95% of all written Spanish.
It is unnecessary to read the 1st, 2nd, or 3rd book to enjoy this frequency dictionary. That entirely depends on how fluent in Spanish you already are.
You can use this book as a stand-alone course. You can also use it as a supplement to any other language learning method.
Inside this book, you will find:
- The 7.501-10.000 most common Spanish words, with their English translation(s).
- Near-fluent Spanish vocabulary, arranged by general frequency and alphabet.
- Frequency as part of speech. most used adjectives, nouns, verbs, etc.)
- 2.500 Spanish to English example sentences.
- Phonetic spelling of Spanish words
Best Way to Become Fluent in Spanish - Study by Frequency
Not all words are created equal. You will use some words more than other words. Learning words by frequency is the best way to become fluent in Spanish.
According to research, this is the amount of vocabulary you need to learn fluent Spanish:
- 250 words. The core of any language. Without these words, you cannot construct any meaningful sentences. If you know the top 250 words, you know enough to get by as a tourist.
- 750 words. These essential words you will use every single day at least once. This is the standard vocabulary of someone who is starting to "get it".
- 2500 words. You need to know this many words to express everything you could possibly want to say. You probably do need some creativity to get more in-depth points across.
- 5000 words: This is the active vocabulary of native speakers without higher education. You will know 95% of all spoken language and enough to deduce unknown words from context.
- 10,000 words. The amount of active vocabulary of a native speaker who finished college or university.
- 20,000 words. If you can recognize about 20.000 words, you can read, understand, and enjoy a work of literature. Think of things such as a novel by a notable author.
What is Inside This Spanish Vocabulary Builder?
This Spanish-to-English frequency dictionary can be divided into three sections. - 2.500 Spanish words ranked by their general frequency.
- A collection of frequency lists by part of speech. We sorted the general frequency list by adjectives, adverbs, conjunctions, pronouns, prepositions, nouns, numerals, and verbs.
- 2.500 Spanish words in alphabetical order.
Spanish pronunciation can be a bit difficult. To aid you in pronouncing Spanish words correctly, we added phonetic transcriptions to each entry. The book uses the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA).
Build Your Spanish Vocabulary!
The Spanish Frequency Dictionary – Master Vocabulary gives you a practical word list to become fluent in Spanish. Study the most used words to learn fluent Spanish fast.
You can use this frequency dictionary as a stand-alone tool. You can also mix this book with any other language learning applications, courses, lessons, or books.
This book roughly covers CEFR vocabulary ratings from C1 (fluency) to C2+ (mastery). These relatively high-frequency words are an excellent tool for advanced and near-fluent Spanish learners.
Product details E-book
- Series: Spanish-English (Book 4)
- Instant Download
- PDF: 237 pages
- Publisher: MostUsedWords.com (November 29, 2018)
- Language: English
- Read on any smartphone, tablet, or computer.
- PDF reader required for opening file (free)