Module 6 Lesson 3 A1

Spanish A1: Talking about experience with `alguna vez`, `nunca`, and `ya`

By the end of this lesson, you should be able to use simple Spanish for Talking about experience with alguna vez, nunca, and ya. You will practise short lines such as alguna vez, nunca he..., ya he....

Spanish A1: Talking about experience with alguna vez, nunca, and ya

Objective

By the end of this lesson, you should be able to use simple Spanish for Talking about experience with alguna vez, nunca, and ya. You will practise short lines such as alguna vez, nunca he..., ya he....

Why this matters

This lesson matters because beginners still need to say what they have already done or what happened recently. At A1, one clear question, one short answer, and one useful chunk can carry a whole interaction.

Quick A1 context

For first past meaning, stay small. Use one time word, one verb form, and one clear idea. Accuracy matters more than telling a long story.

Core explanation

Start with one useful frame

Begin with a model like alguna vez. Learn it as one whole line before you analyse every word.

Then change one small part

Keep the same structure and swap one detail, as in nunca he....

Keep this clear

Small adverbs like ya and todavía no change the meaning a lot, so place them carefully.

A1 tip

If you feel stuck, return to a safe model such as Has ido alguna vez...? and build from there.

Core forms or patterns

  • alguna vez
  • nunca
  • ya
  • todavía no
  • aún no

Meaning contrasts

  • these words shape meaning more than tense endings alone
  • ya and todavía no are especially useful in everyday conversation

Example sentences

  • Has estado alguna vez en Peru?
  • Nunca he probado eso.
  • Ya he terminado.
  • todavía no he llamado.
  • Aun no hemos comido.
  • Ya he visto esa serie.
  • Nunca he viajado solo.
  • Has ido alguna vez a Mexico?

Common mistakes

  • Wrong: Ever you have gone? Better: Has ido alguna vez...? Why: Use the Spanish word order with the fixed marker.
  • Wrong: No yet Better: todavía no. Why: Use the full Spanish chunk.
  • Wrong: Already I finished Better: Ya he terminado. Why: ya usually comes before the auxiliary here.

Useful expressions and chunks

  • alguna vez
  • nunca he...
  • ya he...
  • todavía no...
  • aún no...

Mini comparison with English

These markers are powerful because they help you say more with very little new grammar.

Guided practice

  1. Complete each mini-sentence. Write one word or one short phrase.

    • a. Has _____ alguna vez en Peru?
    • b. Nunca he _____ eso.
    • c. Ya he _____.
    • d. _____ no he llamado.
  2. Choose the better Spanish sentence.

    • a. Ever you have gone? / Has ido alguna vez...?
    • b. No yet / todavía no.
    • c. Already I finished / Ya he terminado.
  3. Write the correct version.

    • a. Ever you have gone?
    • b. No yet
    • c. Already I finished
  4. Finish these useful mini-phrases.

    • a. alguna vez ...
    • b. nunca he ________
    • c. ya he ________
  5. Mini output.

    • Write two short sentences about you or your routine.
    • Try to use:
      • alguna vez
      • nunca
      • ya

Answer key

    • a. Has estado alguna vez en Peru?
    • b. Nunca he probado eso.
    • c. Ya he terminado.
    • d. todavía no he llamado.
    • a. Has ido alguna vez...?
    • b. todavía no.
    • c. Ya he terminado.
    • a. Has ido alguna vez...?
    • b. todavía no.
    • c. Ya he terminado.
  1. Open answers. Possible models:

    • a. Has estado alguna vez en Peru?
    • b. Nunca he probado eso.
    • c. Ya he terminado.
  2. Open answer.

    • Possible model: Has estado alguna vez en Peru?

Mini production task

Write 3 or 4 short lines about you, your routine, or a simple real situation using the language from this lesson. Try to include alguna vez, nunca he..., ya he....

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