Today we’re talking about garden weeds and the lessons they can give us such as:
* Persistence
* Determination
* Playing to our strengths
* How context matters

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Video Rating: / 5

Learn European Portuguese (Portugal) - Vocabulary - In the garden

// F R E E P O R T U G U E S E S T A R T E R K I T
📌 Download the free Starter Kit: 20 pages of practical content to help you get started in learning European Portuguese
http://bit.ly/plstarterkit

// T R A N S C R I P T A N D T R A N S L A T I O N
This is a video of the Portuguese Lab Podcast. Check the blog post:
📢 https://www.portugueselab.com/podcast/058-garden-vocabulary-in-portuguese

This is a European Portuguese lesson for beginners and it focuses on Portuguese vocabulary related to the garden.

// S U B S C R I B E F O R R E G U L A R V I D E O S
📌 https://www.youtube.com/portugueselab?sub_confirmation=1
Video Rating: / 5

What We Can Learn From a Garden Weed [4 Lessons]

| Gardening Education | 11 Comments
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11 Comments

  • The SPIRITLIGHT Surround yourself with

    well kev-your just simply irritating kinda like you suspect your audience is pre-k. so all i can say is "luck with all that"

  • Katharina Obenholzner

    01:59 …what form is "rega-la"? (Can't put the apostrophe on the a on my phone sry…). I can't find an answer online – it's coming from regar (to water)? But "rega-la"? Google translator says it means "water it" as a command? Actually maybe the problem is that my first language is german and in german it says it means "gießen Sie es", which is a term of saying a command in a distanced polite way – "Sie" refers to a person the same as "you" does in english. But in german "you" can mean "du" (if you are friends with the person e.g.) but it can also mean "Sie" (either if it is one or more people you talk to, but are not close to at all, kind of a respectful distanced version of you (I hate that we use it in german since it is also marking hierarchy positions, for example in a lot of job positions your are supposed to use it for your boss or costumers)… sorry for the long…explanation. "Thinking" in German language structures is probably the worst for learning Portuguese, but I can't help it 🙂 anyway, if you could explain what "rega-la" means, what form it is, why this form is used within the example sentence…I'd be so grateful! Thank you so so so much Susana also for all the hard work you put into teaching Portuguese <3