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Coffee Break Spanish

Coffee Break Languages

Análisis de chistes sobre química y gramática

From Can you get these 3 Spanish jokes? (Anabel explains why they're funny)May 11, 2026

Excerpt from Coffee Break Spanish

Can you get these 3 Spanish jokes? (Anabel explains why they're funny)May 11, 2026 — starts at 0:00

Hi, this is Elise Hugh from TED Talks Daily, and this episode is brought to you by Ambetter Health. For many employers and brokers, group health insurance means unpredictable costs and plans that try to fit everyone but end up fitting no one. A model called ICRA is changing that. Employers set a fixed contribution. Employees pick the health plan that works for them, their family, their doctors, their budget. Predictable for the business, personal for the people. That's a better kind of coverage. Get coverage you control. Find out if an ICRA is right for you at ambetterhealth.com . Now more people than ever can bring in their bill for a better deal at Verizon. Got ATT or T-Mobile? We got you. Xfinity or Spectrum? You too. So tell your friends, your family, your quirky neighbor Jeff. Grab your megaphone and yell it from the rooftop. Get a better deal at Verizon. Because chances are anyone in shouting distance is included. Bring in your ATT T-Mobile, Xfinity, or Spectrum bill, and we'll give you a better deal on the best network. Come by Verizon today. Best network based on Rootmetric's best overall mobile network performance, US second half 2025. All rights reserved. Must provide recent consumer mobile bill in the name of the person redeeming the bill, additional terms, cond Welcome to Coffee Break Spanish. Yo soy Anabel y tengo muchas ganas de traerte tres chistes que pondrán a prueba tu español I have chosen 3 jokes that will test your Spanish, but that will also teach you something interesting about the language. Si te interesa, no te vayas muy lejos, que empezamos. El primer chiste es una conversación y dice así: Hola, ¿tienen libros para el cansancio? Sí, pero están a Let's look at it in more detail. It starts with Hola, hello, do you have books about tiredness? And the cleric answers Si, but they are agotados. And here is where the joke comes from. Agotado has two meanings in Spanish: exhausted and out of stock. So the customer is looking for books about tiredness, but the books are exhausted or out of stock, or maybe both. Now, just for extra knowledge, let's see agotado in a different context. Can you guess if we are using agotado meaning exhausted or out of sto ck? El ejemplo is no pude comprar la camisa que quería porque estaba agot ada. The translation is I couldn't buy the shirt I wanted because there was no stock or because it was out of stock. So here, agotada, which agrees with camisa, then it's used as out of stock. Genial. Buen trabajo! Ahora vamos a ver nuestro siguiente chiste. And we level up a bit, and for the next joke, we need some very basic knowledge of chemistry. But nothing too fancy, don't worry And what I like about this joke is that now we don't have a play on words, but the funny bit is in the pronunciation. So listen carefully. How do chemists say goodbye? Well the pun is Acido un placer. Acido means acid, a substance that may dissolve other materials. However, acido also sounds close to ac ido , as in acido un placer It has been a pleasure. Now if my accent will have been different and I will have pronounced the th sound as th, this joke will also work. Ha sido un placer. So, what I really like about this joke is that it proves that native speakers are going to understand you whether or not you pronounce the sound th . Es genial, ¿no crees? Now here comes the last joke, and it is very nice because it uses a very interesting grammar point that might be a bit tricky for some learners, but it is very El chiste dice así : Doctor, dígame la verdad. ¿Tengo problemas de memoria? Kesy The translation is something like doctor tell me the truth do I have memory problems? And the doctor says yes you do. What I like about this joke is that it is subtle and that the giveaway is a very interesting and super useful grammar point, which is the use of que there at the beginning of the sentence. The doctor is not saying si. They are saying que sí . So what does it mean? Well, first of all, maybe you have heard phrases like que aproveche or que lo pases bien, which are wishes. And that is why we have the subjunctive in aproveche and pases. We start with que because when we say que aproveche it It's like saying espero que aproveche, or espero que lo pases bien in que lo pases bien. However, that espero is not necessary because we get it from the context that it is a word Ahora bien, ese es uno de los usos de qué, pero no es el uso de este chiste. So that is one of the uses of qué when it appears at the beginning of the sentence, but it is not the use that we are using here in this joke. The type of que used in que si is a bit different. Now it is not a wish, but a repetition. Que sí comes from dije que si. I said I already said yes. So we can see this type of use in many other contexts. Imagine you didn't get what someone said and then you asked me no epod . What has he said? I couldn't get it. Then I'll reply

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