Javea Grapevine Issue No. 171 - 2014 | Page 32

32 | The Grapevine Issue 171 2014 Lynn Cobb !NO ME ENCUENTRO BIEN! Learn Aprender www.learn-aprender.blogspot.com.es www.facebook.com/LearnAprender Years ago, when I was first learning Spanish, I took a phone call from the school where my then 5 & 8 year old children attended. The school secretary said ‘A Jessica no le encuentra bien’ . Now, I knew that the verb ENCONTRAR meant ‘to find’…. so I thought they’d lost my daughter!! Then he said ‘tiene fiebre’ & I stopped panicking!! …..we went to collect her. ENCONTRAR – means to meet or to find – but there’s a ‘reflexive’ version ENCONTRARSE – reflexive verbs are best described as something you do to yourself – so what the secretary was really saying was ‘Jessica doesn’t find hereslf well’ – she didn’t feel well! ¿Qué te pasa? ¿Qué te duele? The doctor or pharmacist might ask you either of these – what’s wrong? where does it hurt? A friend might say Tienes mala cara… literally ‘you have a bad face’ – you don’t look well! If you just don’t feel too good, you would say No me encuentro bien - I don’t feel well; if you have a headache, say Me duele la cabeza, or you have a sore throat – tengo dolor de la garganta. If you have a cold, say tengo un resfriado. Tengo fiebre – I have a fever. Estoy constipado/estoy constipada doesn’t mean what you think it does – you really want to say estoy estreñido/ estoy estreñida . Constipado means congested (in the nose/head)... estoy estreñido means what you thought constipado meant! Diarrea , however, is what it seems….and so much easier to spell in Spanish! More about reflexive verbs another time – but here’s some useful vocabulary & phrases for going to the doctor or farmacia. Remember that pharmacists in Spain can often prescribe for simple ailments, do blood & urine tests, check your blood pressure & cholestorol among other things. Lynn Cobb If they feel that whatever ails you is beyond their remit the will send you to the doctor, of course. Estoy regular might mean that you are ‘regular’ (not estreñido ).. but it also means that you feel OK; Estoy fatal doesn’t mean that you’re dead nor dying, but maybe you feel that bad! A visit to the dentist might make you feel nervioso (nervous), or maybe you would say tengo miedo