A1 Expression ニュートラル

Hay

There is/are

意味

Used to indicate the existence or presence of something.

🌍

文化的背景

In Spain, 'Hay que ver' is a very common filler phrase used to express amazement, whether positive or negative. The phrase 'No hay bronca' is a very common way to say 'No problem' or 'No worries'. Argentines often use 'No hay drama' instead of 'No hay problema' to signify that everything is fine. In many regions, '¿Qué hay?' is a standard informal greeting, often shortened to '¿Qué hay?' or '¿Qué onda?'.

⚠️

The Plural Trap

Never say 'hayn'. It's the most common mistake for beginners. 'Hay' is always 'hay'.

🎯

The 'A' Rule

If you see 'un', 'una', 'unos', or 'unas', you almost certainly need 'hay'.

意味

Used to indicate the existence or presence of something.

⚠️

The Plural Trap

Never say 'hayn'. It's the most common mistake for beginners. 'Hay' is always 'hay'.

🎯

The 'A' Rule

If you see 'un', 'una', 'unos', or 'unas', you almost certainly need 'hay'.

💬

Politeness

Use 'No hay de qué' instead of just 'De nada' to sound more sophisticated and warm.

自分をテスト

Fill in the blank with the correct form of 'hay' or 'está'.

En mi mochila ___ un cuaderno.

✓ 正解! ✗ おしい! 正解: hay

We use 'hay' because we are introducing an indefinite object (un cuaderno).

Which sentence is grammatically correct?

Talking about multiple apples in the kitchen:

✓ 正解! ✗ おしい! 正解: Hay muchas manzanas.

'Hay' never takes an 'n' for plural nouns.

Complete the dialogue.

A: ¿___ algún restaurante italiano por aquí? B: Sí, ___ uno en la esquina.

✓ 正解! ✗ おしい! 正解: Hay / hay

Both sentences refer to the existence of an indefinite restaurant.

Match the phrase to the situation.

1. Hay que estudiar. 2. No hay de qué. 3. ¿Qué hay?

✓ 正解! ✗ おしい! 正解: 1-c, 2-b, 3-a

These are common idiomatic uses of 'hay'.

🎉 スコア: /4

ビジュアル学習ツール

Hay vs Está

HAY (Existence)
Hay un libro There is a book
ESTÁ (Location)
El libro está aquí The book is here

練習問題バンク

4 問題
Fill in the blank with the correct form of 'hay' or 'está'. Fill Blank A1

En mi mochila ___ un cuaderno.

✓ 正解! ✗ おしい! 正解: hay

We use 'hay' because we are introducing an indefinite object (un cuaderno).

Which sentence is grammatically correct? Choose A1

Talking about multiple apples in the kitchen:

✓ 正解! ✗ おしい! 正解: Hay muchas manzanas.

'Hay' never takes an 'n' for plural nouns.

Complete the dialogue. dialogue_completion A2

A: ¿___ algún restaurante italiano por aquí? B: Sí, ___ uno en la esquina.

✓ 正解! ✗ おしい! 正解: Hay / hay

Both sentences refer to the existence of an indefinite restaurant.

Match the phrase to the situation. situation_matching A2

1. Hay que estudiar. 2. No hay de qué. 3. ¿Qué hay?

✓ 正解! ✗ おしい! 正解: 1-c, 2-b, 3-a

These are common idiomatic uses of 'hay'.

🎉 スコア: /4

よくある質問

10 問

Yes! 'Hay mucha gente' (There are many people) or 'Hay un hombre en la puerta' (There is a man at the door).

'Ha' is used as an auxiliary verb (e.g., 'Él ha comido'). 'Hay' is the special form for existence.

It is neutral. It's used in both formal speeches and casual texts.

'Hay' introduces something new; 'Está' locates something we already know about.

No, you must say 'El gato está' or 'Hay un gato'.

Use 'había' for descriptions or 'hubo' for specific events.

No, 'hay' is invariable. Only the articles and nouns after it change gender.

It's an informal greeting like 'What's up?'

'Hay que' is for everyone (general); 'Tengo que' is just for me.

Yes, just change the tone. '¿Hay pan?'

関連フレーズ

🔗

Hay que

builds on

It is necessary to...

🔗

No hay de qué

specialized form

You're welcome.

🔗

Ahí hay

similar

There is [over there].

🔗

Lo que hay

idiom

It is what it is.

🔄

Haber

synonym

To exist / To have.

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