[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":699},["ShallowReactive",2],{"article-\u002Farticles\u002Fcommon-mistakes-spanish-english-speakers":3},{"_path":4,"_dir":5,"_draft":6,"_partial":6,"_locale":7,"title":8,"description":9,"date":10,"author":11,"category":12,"tags":13,"body":18,"_type":693,"_id":694,"_source":695,"_file":696,"_stem":697,"_extension":698},"\u002Farticles\u002Fcommon-mistakes-spanish-english-speakers","articles",false,"","Common Mistakes English Speakers Make in Spanish (and How to Fix Them)","The grammar, pronunciation and false-friend mistakes English speakers make in Spanish, ranked by how often they cost you comprehension - with the structural fix for each.","2026-06-05T00:00:00+00:00","Michael McGettrick","Methodology",[14,15,16,17],"spanish","common mistakes","false friends","language learning",{"type":19,"children":20,"toc":676},"root",[21,30,36,41,48,55,60,80,85,91,96,101,106,111,117,122,127,132,137,143,148,153,188,193,199,204,416,421,427,432,444,449,463,469,474,517,523,528,533,538,544,549,592,598,610,615,620,626],{"type":22,"tag":23,"props":24,"children":26},"element","h1",{"id":25},"common-mistakes-english-speakers-make-in-spanish",[27],{"type":28,"value":29},"text","Common Mistakes English Speakers Make in Spanish",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":32,"children":33},"p",{},[34],{"type":28,"value":35},"Ten years of speaking Spanish at C1-C2, two of those teaching English in Madrid, and watching every visiting friend make the same mistakes in the same order. This article catalogues the errors that cost English speakers the most comprehension and respect, ranked from \"everyone does it\" down to \"the C1 plateau errors.\" Each entry names the underlying structural reason and the fix.",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":37,"children":38},{},[39],{"type":28,"value":40},"The bigger meta-point underneath this list: the difference between A2 and B2 Spanish is not vocabulary; it is the elimination of these specific structural errors. Most of them have nothing to do with knowing the words and everything to do with deploying them the way a Spanish speaker would.",{"type":22,"tag":42,"props":43,"children":45},"h2",{"id":44},"the-top-eight-errors-ranked-by-cost",[46],{"type":28,"value":47},"The top eight errors, ranked by cost",{"type":22,"tag":49,"props":50,"children":52},"h3",{"id":51},"_1-ser-vs-estar-confusion-the-everyone-error",[53],{"type":28,"value":54},"1. Ser vs estar confusion (the everyone error)",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":56,"children":57},{},[58],{"type":28,"value":59},"What goes wrong: English speakers default to \"ser\" for everything because English has only one verb \"to be.\" The result is sentences like \"Yo soy cansado\" (which sounds like \"I am a tired person by nature\") instead of \"Yo estoy cansado\" (I am tired).",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":61,"children":62},{},[63,65,71,73,78],{"type":28,"value":64},"The structural fix: ser is for inherent qualities, identity, time, origin, possession. Estar is for states, locations, conditions, and ongoing actions. The English-speaker shortcut that catches 80% of cases: if the property is ",{"type":22,"tag":66,"props":67,"children":68},"strong",{},[69],{"type":28,"value":70},"inherent or definitional",{"type":28,"value":72},", ser. If it is a ",{"type":22,"tag":66,"props":74,"children":75},{},[76],{"type":28,"value":77},"state, location or condition",{"type":28,"value":79}," that could change in the next hour, estar.",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":81,"children":82},{},[83],{"type":28,"value":84},"The error you do not realise you are making: \"Eres aburrido\" (you are boring, by nature - rude) vs \"estas aburrido\" (you are bored, right now - innocent observation). The wrong choice changes the meaning.",{"type":22,"tag":49,"props":86,"children":88},{"id":87},"_2-the-gustar-logic-flip",[89],{"type":28,"value":90},"2. The gustar logic flip",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":92,"children":93},{},[94],{"type":28,"value":95},"What goes wrong: English speakers translate \"I like coffee\" word for word as \"Yo gusto cafe,\" which is grammatically wrong and means almost nothing in Spanish.",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":97,"children":98},{},[99],{"type":28,"value":100},"The structural fix: gustar does not mean \"to like.\" It means \"to be pleasing.\" The Spanish sentence is built backwards from the English: \"El cafe me gusta\" (coffee is pleasing to me). The subject is the thing liked, the indirect object is the person doing the liking.",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":102,"children":103},{},[104],{"type":28,"value":105},"Once you internalise this, the verb family opens up: encantar (to delight), interesar (to interest), molestar (to bother), faltar (to be lacking), doler (to hurt), parecer (to seem) all work the same way. \"Me duele la cabeza\" = \"the head hurts to me\" = \"I have a headache.\"",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":107,"children":108},{},[109],{"type":28,"value":110},"The trap that catches B2 learners: getting the conjugation to agree with the right thing. \"Me gustan los gatos\" (cats are pleasing to me, plural verb because cats is plural), not \"Me gusto los gatos.\"",{"type":22,"tag":49,"props":112,"children":114},{"id":113},"_3-the-personal-a-the-silent-error",[115],{"type":28,"value":116},"3. The personal \"a\" (the silent error)",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":118,"children":119},{},[120],{"type":28,"value":121},"What goes wrong: English speakers omit the personal a before animate direct objects, producing \"Veo Maria\" instead of \"Veo a Maria.\"",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":123,"children":124},{},[125],{"type":28,"value":126},"The structural fix: when the direct object of a verb is a specific person or beloved animal, Spanish requires \"a\" before the noun. \"Veo a Maria\" (I see Maria). \"Llamo al medico\" (I call the doctor). Inanimate objects do not take the personal a: \"Veo la casa\" (I see the house).",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":128,"children":129},{},[130],{"type":28,"value":131},"The reason it is a silent error: the sentence is grammatical and clear without it; you sound foreign rather than wrong. Native speakers correct it less because the meaning lands. But after a year of conversation, getting it right is the difference between sounding like a learner and sounding like a speaker.",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":133,"children":134},{},[135],{"type":28,"value":136},"The exception worth knowing: after tener, the personal a is usually dropped. \"Tengo dos hermanos\" (I have two brothers), not \"Tengo a dos hermanos.\"",{"type":22,"tag":49,"props":138,"children":140},{"id":139},"_4-por-vs-para-the-high-frequency-tax",[141],{"type":28,"value":142},"4. Por vs para (the high-frequency tax)",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":144,"children":145},{},[146],{"type":28,"value":147},"What goes wrong: English speakers default to one or the other (usually \"para\" because it sounds more like \"for\") and use it everywhere.",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":149,"children":150},{},[151],{"type":28,"value":152},"The structural fix: por = \"because of \u002F through \u002F in exchange for \u002F duration.\" Para = \"in order to \u002F for the benefit of \u002F by (deadline) \u002F destination.\"",{"type":22,"tag":154,"props":155,"children":156},"ul",{},[157,163,168,173,178,183],{"type":22,"tag":158,"props":159,"children":160},"li",{},[161],{"type":28,"value":162},"Lo hago por amor (I do it because of love) - reason.",{"type":22,"tag":158,"props":164,"children":165},{},[166],{"type":28,"value":167},"Lo hago para ti (I do it for you, for your benefit).",{"type":22,"tag":158,"props":169,"children":170},{},[171],{"type":28,"value":172},"Vivi alli por dos anos (I lived there for two years) - duration.",{"type":22,"tag":158,"props":174,"children":175},{},[176],{"type":28,"value":177},"Lo necesito para el lunes (I need it by Monday) - deadline.",{"type":22,"tag":158,"props":179,"children":180},{},[181],{"type":28,"value":182},"Pasamos por Madrid (We passed through Madrid) - movement through.",{"type":22,"tag":158,"props":184,"children":185},{},[186],{"type":28,"value":187},"Voy para Madrid (I am going to Madrid) - destination.",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":189,"children":190},{},[191],{"type":28,"value":192},"The drill: write out 10 sentences with each, alternating, until the structural distinction is reflexive rather than analytical. Three months of consistent practice flips this from a guess to a reflex.",{"type":22,"tag":49,"props":194,"children":196},{"id":195},"_5-false-friends-that-change-meaning",[197],{"type":28,"value":198},"5. False friends that change meaning",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":200,"children":201},{},[202],{"type":28,"value":203},"The high-frequency false cognates that produce embarrassing or confusing errors:",{"type":22,"tag":205,"props":206,"children":207},"table",{},[208,232],{"type":22,"tag":209,"props":210,"children":211},"thead",{},[212],{"type":22,"tag":213,"props":214,"children":215},"tr",{},[216,222,227],{"type":22,"tag":217,"props":218,"children":219},"th",{},[220],{"type":28,"value":221},"Spanish word",{"type":22,"tag":217,"props":223,"children":224},{},[225],{"type":28,"value":226},"Looks like (English)",{"type":22,"tag":217,"props":228,"children":229},{},[230],{"type":28,"value":231},"Actually means",{"type":22,"tag":233,"props":234,"children":235},"tbody",{},[236,255,272,290,308,326,344,362,380,398],{"type":22,"tag":213,"props":237,"children":238},{},[239,245,250],{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":241,"children":242},"td",{},[243],{"type":28,"value":244},"embarazada",{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":246,"children":247},{},[248],{"type":28,"value":249},"embarrassed",{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":251,"children":252},{},[253],{"type":28,"value":254},"pregnant",{"type":22,"tag":213,"props":256,"children":257},{},[258,263,267],{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":259,"children":260},{},[261],{"type":28,"value":262},"sensible",{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":264,"children":265},{},[266],{"type":28,"value":262},{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":268,"children":269},{},[270],{"type":28,"value":271},"sensitive",{"type":22,"tag":213,"props":273,"children":274},{},[275,280,285],{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":276,"children":277},{},[278],{"type":28,"value":279},"eventualmente",{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":281,"children":282},{},[283],{"type":28,"value":284},"eventually",{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":286,"children":287},{},[288],{"type":28,"value":289},"possibly \u002F in the event that",{"type":22,"tag":213,"props":291,"children":292},{},[293,298,303],{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":294,"children":295},{},[296],{"type":28,"value":297},"actualmente",{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":299,"children":300},{},[301],{"type":28,"value":302},"actually",{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":304,"children":305},{},[306],{"type":28,"value":307},"currently",{"type":22,"tag":213,"props":309,"children":310},{},[311,316,321],{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":312,"children":313},{},[314],{"type":28,"value":315},"asistir",{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":317,"children":318},{},[319],{"type":28,"value":320},"to assist",{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":322,"children":323},{},[324],{"type":28,"value":325},"to attend",{"type":22,"tag":213,"props":327,"children":328},{},[329,334,339],{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":330,"children":331},{},[332],{"type":28,"value":333},"constipado",{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":335,"children":336},{},[337],{"type":28,"value":338},"constipated",{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":340,"children":341},{},[342],{"type":28,"value":343},"with a cold",{"type":22,"tag":213,"props":345,"children":346},{},[347,352,357],{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":348,"children":349},{},[350],{"type":28,"value":351},"introducir",{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":353,"children":354},{},[355],{"type":28,"value":356},"to introduce",{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":358,"children":359},{},[360],{"type":28,"value":361},"to insert",{"type":22,"tag":213,"props":363,"children":364},{},[365,370,375],{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":366,"children":367},{},[368],{"type":28,"value":369},"recordar",{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":371,"children":372},{},[373],{"type":28,"value":374},"to record",{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":376,"children":377},{},[378],{"type":28,"value":379},"to remember",{"type":22,"tag":213,"props":381,"children":382},{},[383,388,393],{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":384,"children":385},{},[386],{"type":28,"value":387},"ropa",{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":389,"children":390},{},[391],{"type":28,"value":392},"rope",{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":394,"children":395},{},[396],{"type":28,"value":397},"clothes",{"type":22,"tag":213,"props":399,"children":400},{},[401,406,411],{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":402,"children":403},{},[404],{"type":28,"value":405},"sopa",{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":407,"children":408},{},[409],{"type":28,"value":410},"soap",{"type":22,"tag":240,"props":412,"children":413},{},[414],{"type":28,"value":415},"soup",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":417,"children":418},{},[419],{"type":28,"value":420},"The trap that catches B1 learners: assuming all Latin-derived English-looking Spanish words mean what they look like. They do not. The fix is exposure - reading in Spanish surfaces false friends in context and lets you replace the English-shaped assumption with the Spanish reality.",{"type":22,"tag":49,"props":422,"children":424},{"id":423},"_6-the-subjunctive-avoidance-the-plateau-marker",[425],{"type":28,"value":426},"6. The subjunctive avoidance (the plateau marker)",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":428,"children":429},{},[430],{"type":28,"value":431},"What goes wrong: English speakers know the indicative present, past and future and stop there, producing sentences like \"Quiero que tu vienes\" (literally \"I want that you come\" in the indicative) instead of \"Quiero que tu vengas\" (with the present subjunctive).",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":433,"children":434},{},[435,437,442],{"type":28,"value":436},"The structural fix: the subjunctive is triggered by main clauses expressing ",{"type":22,"tag":66,"props":438,"children":439},{},[440],{"type":28,"value":441},"desire, doubt, emotion, denial, command, possibility, value judgement",{"type":28,"value":443},", plus specific conjunctions. Quiero que, espero que, dudo que, antes de que, para que, cuando (when referring to the future), and a few dozen others all trigger the subjunctive in the dependent clause.",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":445,"children":446},{},[447],{"type":28,"value":448},"The reason this is the B1-B2 plateau marker: a learner who has not internalised the subjunctive cannot express hypothetical, conditional, or evaluative statements naturally. Almost all interesting conversation past basic survival uses the subjunctive somewhere. A learner who never gets there sounds permanently elementary.",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":450,"children":451},{},[452,454,461],{"type":28,"value":453},"The drill: the subjunctive is the single highest-return grammar topic at intermediate level. Spend a month on it. The ",{"type":22,"tag":455,"props":456,"children":458},"a",{"href":457},"\u002Fspanish\u002Fgrammar\u002Fintermediate",[459],{"type":28,"value":460},"intermediate Spanish grammar",{"type":28,"value":462}," page covers the full system.",{"type":22,"tag":49,"props":464,"children":466},{"id":465},"_7-pronunciation-errors-that-cost-comprehension",[467],{"type":28,"value":468},"7. Pronunciation errors that cost comprehension",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":470,"children":471},{},[472],{"type":28,"value":473},"Four sounds English speakers get wrong, ranked by how much they cost you:",{"type":22,"tag":154,"props":475,"children":476},{},[477,487,497,507],{"type":22,"tag":158,"props":478,"children":479},{},[480,485],{"type":22,"tag":66,"props":481,"children":482},{},[483],{"type":28,"value":484},"The rolled R (la erre fuerte)",{"type":28,"value":486},": in palabra (word), perro (dog), carro (car). English speakers approximate with an English R, producing speech that natives understand but mark instantly as foreign. The drill is repeated practice with words containing rr until the trill is reflexive; expect months, not weeks.",{"type":22,"tag":158,"props":488,"children":489},{},[490,495],{"type":22,"tag":66,"props":491,"children":492},{},[493],{"type":28,"value":494},"C \u002F Z in Castilian Spanish",{"type":28,"value":496},": in Spain \"ce\" and \"zeta\" are pronounced like English \"th\" in \"thin.\" Latin American Spanish merges these with \"s.\" Speakers of one variety adapting to the other need to add or drop the distincion deliberately.",{"type":22,"tag":158,"props":498,"children":499},{},[500,505],{"type":22,"tag":66,"props":501,"children":502},{},[503],{"type":28,"value":504},"The Spanish J",{"type":28,"value":506},": jota, juego, mujer. A guttural sound from the back of the throat, similar to the German \"ch\" in \"Bach\" or the Scottish \"ch\" in \"loch.\" English speakers approximate with \"H.\" Wrong-sounding but understandable.",{"type":22,"tag":158,"props":508,"children":509},{},[510,515],{"type":22,"tag":66,"props":511,"children":512},{},[513],{"type":28,"value":514},"The \"ll\" sound (yeismo)",{"type":28,"value":516},": in calle (street), lluvia (rain). Most modern speakers pronounce this like \"y\" in English \"yes\" (the yeismo pronunciation); Argentine and Uruguayan Spanish pronounces it as a \"sh\" sound (yeismo rehilado). English speakers should pick one consistent variant rather than alternating.",{"type":22,"tag":49,"props":518,"children":520},{"id":519},"_8-reflexive-verb-omission",[521],{"type":28,"value":522},"8. Reflexive verb omission",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":524,"children":525},{},[526],{"type":28,"value":527},"What goes wrong: English speakers omit the reflexive pronoun where Spanish requires it. \"Me lavo las manos\" (I wash my hands) becomes \"Lavo las manos\" (I wash the hands, ambiguous about whose).",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":529,"children":530},{},[531],{"type":28,"value":532},"The structural fix: many everyday verbs are reflexive in Spanish but not in English (levantarse - to get up, ducharse - to shower, dormirse - to fall asleep, despertarse - to wake up, vestirse - to get dressed). The reflexive marker is required and changes the meaning.",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":534,"children":535},{},[536],{"type":28,"value":537},"The subtle trap: some verbs change meaning when made reflexive. Ir (to go) vs irse (to leave). Dormir (to sleep) vs dormirse (to fall asleep). Comer (to eat) vs comerse (to eat up, intensively). The reflexive is not optional cosmetic; it is meaningful.",{"type":22,"tag":42,"props":539,"children":541},{"id":540},"the-errors-that-mark-you-as-c1",[542],{"type":28,"value":543},"The errors that mark you as C1+",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":545,"children":546},{},[547],{"type":28,"value":548},"Once the eight above are fixed, the remaining errors are the ones that mark a learner as B2-C1 rather than C2-near-native. These do not cost comprehension; they signal \"competent learner\" rather than \"fluent speaker.\"",{"type":22,"tag":154,"props":550,"children":551},{},[552,562,572,582],{"type":22,"tag":158,"props":553,"children":554},{},[555,560],{"type":22,"tag":66,"props":556,"children":557},{},[558],{"type":28,"value":559},"The preterite \u002F imperfect distinction in narration",{"type":28,"value":561},": defaulting to the preterite for everything in past-tense storytelling, missing the imperfect for ongoing background and habit. \"Cuando llegue (preterite) estabamos hablando (imperfect)\" rather than \"Cuando llegue, hablabamos.\"",{"type":22,"tag":158,"props":563,"children":564},{},[565,570],{"type":22,"tag":66,"props":566,"children":567},{},[568],{"type":28,"value":569},"The subjunctive in concessive constructions",{"type":28,"value":571}," (aunque + indicative for real concession, aunque + subjunctive for hypothetical): \"Aunque llueve, salgo\" (although it is raining) vs \"Aunque llueva, salgo\" (even if it rains).",{"type":22,"tag":158,"props":573,"children":574},{},[575,580],{"type":22,"tag":66,"props":576,"children":577},{},[578],{"type":28,"value":579},"The future of probability",{"type":28,"value":581}," (sera la una = it must be one o'clock) and the conditional of probability (serian las dos = it must have been two o'clock): English-speakers translating English uncertainty literally rather than using the elegant Spanish construction.",{"type":22,"tag":158,"props":583,"children":584},{},[585,590],{"type":22,"tag":66,"props":586,"children":587},{},[588],{"type":28,"value":589},"Spoken connectors",{"type":28,"value":591},": defaulting to \"y, pero, porque\" when fluent speakers reach for \"asi que, por eso, lo que pasa es que, ahora que lo pienso.\"",{"type":22,"tag":42,"props":593,"children":595},{"id":594},"what-to-do-about-all-of-this",[596],{"type":28,"value":597},"What to do about all of this",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":599,"children":600},{},[601,603,608],{"type":28,"value":602},"The strategic answer is not to drill each error individually until it disappears. The structural answer is ",{"type":22,"tag":66,"props":604,"children":605},{},[606],{"type":28,"value":607},"lots of input",{"type":28,"value":609},": reading Spanish, listening to Spanish, watching Spanish-language content, having Spanish conversations until your brain has internalised what right sounds like and starts catching the errors before you produce them.",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":611,"children":612},{},[613],{"type":28,"value":614},"The supplementary answer is targeted drill on the highest-cost errors: ser vs estar and the subjunctive both reward direct study because the structural rule is teachable and the volume of correct examples in input gets you the rest of the way. The pronunciation errors reward shadowing native audio (repeating after a native speaker, matching cadence and sound). The false friends are caught by reading.",{"type":22,"tag":31,"props":616,"children":617},{},[618],{"type":28,"value":619},"The single highest-return month an intermediate Spanish learner can spend is on the subjunctive. The single highest-return year is on volume - of reading, listening, conversation, and exposure to the language as adults use it. The errors fix themselves under exposure faster than any drill list will fix them under deliberate study.",{"type":22,"tag":42,"props":621,"children":623},{"id":622},"cross-references",[624],{"type":28,"value":625},"Cross-references",{"type":22,"tag":154,"props":627,"children":628},{},[629,642,652,664],{"type":22,"tag":158,"props":630,"children":631},{},[632,634,640],{"type":28,"value":633},"The ",{"type":22,"tag":455,"props":635,"children":637},{"href":636},"\u002Fspanish\u002Fgrammar",[638],{"type":28,"value":639},"Spanish grammar cheatsheet",{"type":28,"value":641}," covers the A1-B1 basics where most of these errors form.",{"type":22,"tag":158,"props":643,"children":644},{},[645,646,650],{"type":28,"value":633},{"type":22,"tag":455,"props":647,"children":648},{"href":457},[649],{"type":28,"value":460},{"type":28,"value":651}," page covers the subjunctive in full.",{"type":22,"tag":158,"props":653,"children":654},{},[655,656,662],{"type":28,"value":633},{"type":22,"tag":455,"props":657,"children":659},{"href":658},"\u002Fspanish\u002Fgrammar\u002Fadvanced",[660],{"type":28,"value":661},"advanced Spanish grammar",{"type":28,"value":663}," page covers the C1-C2 distinctions.",{"type":22,"tag":158,"props":665,"children":666},{},[667,668,674],{"type":28,"value":633},{"type":22,"tag":455,"props":669,"children":671},{"href":670},"\u002Fspanish\u002Faccents",[672],{"type":28,"value":673},"Spanish accents guide",{"type":28,"value":675}," covers the regional pronunciation choices that determine which \"right\" pronunciation you are aiming for.",{"title":7,"searchDepth":677,"depth":677,"links":678},2,[679,690,691,692],{"id":44,"depth":677,"text":47,"children":680},[681,683,684,685,686,687,688,689],{"id":51,"depth":682,"text":54},3,{"id":87,"depth":682,"text":90},{"id":113,"depth":682,"text":116},{"id":139,"depth":682,"text":142},{"id":195,"depth":682,"text":198},{"id":423,"depth":682,"text":426},{"id":465,"depth":682,"text":468},{"id":519,"depth":682,"text":522},{"id":540,"depth":677,"text":543},{"id":594,"depth":677,"text":597},{"id":622,"depth":677,"text":625},"markdown","content:articles:common-mistakes-spanish-english-speakers.md","content","articles\u002Fcommon-mistakes-spanish-english-speakers.md","articles\u002Fcommon-mistakes-spanish-english-speakers","md",1780941685601]