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How to Learn Spanish Easily in Hotels

Chelsea Hotel by Sam Rohn - Location Scout

Learn Spanish – Helpful Hints for Learning Quickly

Many people may feel Spanish is difficult if they're not comfortable with learning languages. It's likely that you were told to start with Spanish because it is supposed to be easy to learn. The truth is that most languages are easy to learn, you just have to figure out what kind of learning tricks you want to use to make the process simpler. Lots of suggestions and helpful tips are available to help you learn Spanish much easier. Here are a couple tricks you can use:

When first learning Spanish, one of the most important things to consider is how your accent sounds. You can study grammar from books and memorize vocabulary, but how you actually speak is of primary importance. You can improve your speaking by getting Spanish books or magazines and reading out loud from them. Read out loud from Spanish magazines and practice repeating phrases you hear in Spanish from fluent speakers. This is a great way to teach yourself how to speak Spanish using the appropriate order of words and developing the right inflections. Start practicing this whenever you can; you may be surprised to find that it's fun. It can feel like singing! You can go online! You will have no problems at all finding great learning tips on Spanish. And here is a really cool site: Babelfish, and it's used for translation. You can type your sentence into Babelfish and have it translated to Spanish. This kind of tool is so helpful because you can learn sentences in Spanish. Always remember the sentence structure in English is not the same structure in Spanish. Using the translation tool will help you understand how the sentence structures are different. There are other tools available on the net to help make learning Spanish a little easier.

Immerse yourself in the language.

Is there anywhere close where most people speak Spanish? A very good way to learn is listening to fluent speakers converse. You may find a lot people really are happy to help others communicate in Spanish. It's convenient, close by, and you can receive really great practice speaking Spanish. We've looked at just a few of the many possible ways you can make learning Spanish easier. There are many sources of assistance; look online or in your local community. Some hints will work for you while other hints won't. The best way to find the method that works best is to try a variety of them. Speaking Spanish is something you can do; just find the method that works for you and be persistent.

Top 5 Must Have Gifts for the World Traveler

Travelers aren’t always the same people as tourists. Travelers look the places they visit, tourists just �see’ those places. In my travels, I’ve come up with 5 �can’t do without’ items, and if you are shopping for a holiday gift for the world traveler in your life, these suggestions may be just what you are looking for to give your world traveler something different, necessary, and useful.

1. Digital Camera Binoculars – VERY COOL! The pair of binoculars I purchased have a optimized 3 megapixel digital camera built in to a optically clear pair of binoculars. These are made by Celestron, a high quality optical company, and have a rugged (easily protected) dual shaft rubber coated element, with a completely functional preview screen and 32 bit memory. The binoculars are 8×32 optical magnification. They gave me a perfect view (and memory capture) of the crocodiles sunning themselves on the sandy beach far enough away that I felt safe from becoming their dinner. Easily downloadable to any PC with a USB port, and it has decent photo software with the package. Around $200. From Celestron, http://www.celestron.com.

2. Rolling Backpack w/Detachable Backpack – This rolling backpack is the perfect world traveler’s suitcase! The day pack on the front of the rolling case is stout for tossing in a day’s worth of snacks, maps and water, and is big enough to add your binocular camera and language translation book! World travelers won’t have to scrimp on undies when they have the CalPak 28″ rolling Backpack. It is a roomy 12″ deep, and has terrific S-shaped shoulder straps for comfort. I easily fit a month’s worth of travel into this backpack, and even had room (not much, but some) to bring home souvenirs. A little expensive, but well worth it at around $200. From Ebags, http://www.ebags.com.

3. Toiletry Kit – A terrific, compact hanging toiletry kit keeps all our ditty bag stuff neat and tidy. The convenience of being able to hang your entire toiletry kit on a tree limb overhanging the river or in a shower stall makes this kit a must have for the world traveler. And, no world traveler wants to poke through layers of clothes and maps to get to their shampoo, first thing in the morning or after a day of tramping around the jungle. While you are at it, stock this inexpensive holiday gift up with trial sizes of shampoo, conditioner, antibacterial soap, waterless hand sanitizer, a few disposable razors, and other small personal care items from your local mart type store. The Lewis N. Clark Frontier Hanging Toiletry Kit that I chose has a shatterproof mirror. Around $15, not including filler items purchased separately. Also from Ebags, http://www.ebags.com.

4. Power Adapter Kit – World travelers often slay up having to go purchase a new adapter for every country they visit, just to plug in their laptop, or even their shaver. Help your world traveler avoid this hassle with a power adapter from Walkabout Travel Gear at http://www.walkabouttravelgear.com. For example, Thailand uses the standard European non-grounded socket, and while it is the most common type in the world, most North Americans don’t have a clue. Adapters are inexpensive at around $4 a fragment, or you can buy one of the inclusive travel adapter kits for anywhere from $15 to $85. I recommend Brookstone’s Universal Travel Power Adapter. This unit has what they call an all-in-one create so your world traveler doesn’t have to carry carry multiple country-specific travel adapters. The built-in 110V/220V indicator light lets you know any outlet’s voltage. It is small and very easy to tuck in the corner of your rolling backpack, and can be used throughout Europe, Australia, Asia and both North and South America! The cost is just around $25 and well worth the small price for such a mountainous usefulness! I bought the Universal Power Adapter from Brookstone, just to keep my life simple and my luggage lighter, at http://www.brookstone.com.

5. Cocoon Proceed Sheet - Who says world travelers don’t live in luxury, whether on the Camel Tour Safari or in a crowded hostel in Calcutta? With the cocoon travel sheet, your world traveler will feel comfy, clean and cozy. A roomy rectangular silk �sleeping bag’, the Cocoon Go Sheet weighs just 6.5 ounces, and easily rolls into its own stuff sack. I wouldn’t leave home without mine. The fade sheet is well worth the small expense and can be found at CampMor, http://www.campmor.com for around $30.

These are my favorite world traveler luxuries. I leave my rolling backpack pre-packed with these items all the time. Then when I am off on another adventure, I just toss in a few clothes, my passport, and I am gone! Traveling the World, meeting new people and experiencing unusual adventures.

Kids and Family

Kids and Family Outdoor Photo Shots @ Louie Photography by www.louiephotography.philwired.net blogs

When you come to Minnesota for a Kids and Family Friendly Vacation, you have the opportunity to visit many types of sites. You can visit a place made famous in books and on TV, explore underground, visit a community of the past and so much more. A Kids and Family Friendly Vacation will create memories to last a life time, and those memories should be of things that mean the most to you and your family. Take a look at these suggestions for a Kids and Family Friendly Vacation in Minnesota and see if one or more of them will not fill the bill for your Kids and Family Vacation in Minnesota

The Laura Ingalls Wilder Museum. Yes, there is a Walnut Grove, Minnesota and yes the Ingalls did live here for two years. The only thing left that can be tied to the Ingalls family is a depression where the first home they had, a soddy that was dug into a hill by the banks of Plum Creek was. The museum itself is in town, located in different buildings. You can see a quilt that Laura and her daughter Rose made together, memorabilia donated by some of th stars of the TV show, a bible from the church the Ingalls attende ,scale models of Ingalls TV series homes and Historic documents – letters, photos, articles related to the Ingalls family. This is a great stop on a Kids and Family Friendly Vacation in Minnesota, especially for any one who is a fan of the books or the show. This stop on your Kid and Family Friendly Vacation is located at 330 8th Street, Walnut Grove, Minnesota 56180 800-528-7280

If exploring new and strange places is your idea of a great Kids and Family Friendly Vacation, then visit Niagara Cave and explore deep down below the surface of the earth, where there are underground waterfalls, fossils 400 million years old and a wedding chapel. The tour lasts for about an hour and when it is done, you can have some more fun back on the surface mining for gem stones. They have a 10 acres picnic grounds and their own hiking trail. This suggestion for a stop on a Kids and Family Friendly Vacation is located at 29842 County 30, Harmony, Minnesota 55939

At the End-o-Park Rail Road Park and Museum is a tribute to the past, not only to the rail road, but to the communities the rail roads served back in the days when the steam locomotive ruled the rails and trains were the only way to travel. There is an HO scale model rail road which depicts how this terminal looked at the beginning of the 20th century, a one room school house complete with dinner pails, water cooler, wash basin, old world maps, bell tower and rope, ink wells and cloakrooms, looking exactly like it did when the children of the town would answer the bell every school day morning, a saltbox style house that has been restored to the early 1900 style. You can pay a visit to The Pioneer General Store which was built and operated by Neil and Archibald Currie in 1872. A typical settlement general store, it included a post office and bank in its earliest years. Dakota Indians from nearby Lake Shetek occasionally traded at the store-so were news, gossip and eggs. It looks today as it did then, with the shelves stocked, waiting for the towns people to come. There is much more to see and do here, including the six mile bike trail, playgrounds and historic locomotives. This stop on a Kids and Family Friendly Vacation is located at 440 North Mill Street, Currie, Minnesota 56123 – (507) 763-3708.