A2 Expression カジュアル

¡Qué día!

What a day!

意味

Expresses strong feelings (good or bad) about the day.

🌍

文化的背景

In Spain, '¡Qué día!' is often followed by a trip to a bar for a 'caña' (small beer) to decompress. It's a social signal that you need to talk. Mexicans might use '¡Qué día tan pesado!' to emphasize the weight of the day's burdens. In Buenos Aires, the phrase is often delivered with a characteristic 'sh' sound for the 'y' or 'll' in related sentences, and a lot of hand gestures. Colombians might use '¡Qué día tan berraco!' to mean a very difficult or challenging day.

💡

Use your body

This phrase is 50% words and 50% body language. Shrug your shoulders for a bad day, or throw your hands up for a good one.

⚠️

Accent matters

If you write 'Que dia' without accents, it looks like 'That day' (incomplete sentence) rather than an exclamation.

意味

Expresses strong feelings (good or bad) about the day.

💡

Use your body

This phrase is 50% words and 50% body language. Shrug your shoulders for a bad day, or throw your hands up for a good one.

⚠️

Accent matters

If you write 'Que dia' without accents, it looks like 'That day' (incomplete sentence) rather than an exclamation.

🎯

Add 'más' or 'tan'

To sound like a native, add 'más' or 'tan' + an adjective. '¡Qué día más loco!' sounds much more natural than just '¡Qué día!' in many contexts.

自分をテスト

Choose the correct way to write the exclamation.

How do you write 'What a day!' in Spanish?

✓ 正解! ✗ おしい! 正解: b

Option 'b' is correct because it includes the opening exclamation mark and the accent on 'Qué' and 'día'.

Complete the sentence with the missing word.

¡Qué día ____ largo! No puedo más.

✓ 正解! ✗ おしい! 正解: tan

In Spanish exclamations, we use 'tan' or 'más' before an adjective to add emphasis.

Match the intonation to the situation.

If you say '¡Qué día!' with a big smile and high pitch, what happened?

✓ 正解! ✗ おしい! 正解: b

A high pitch and a smile indicate a positive, exciting '¡Qué día!'.

Complete the dialogue.

Ana: 'He tenido tres exámenes y he perdido el bus.' Luis: '¡_______! Pobre de ti.'

✓ 正解! ✗ おしい! 正解: Qué día

Luis is empathizing with Ana's difficult day using the standard exclamation.

🎉 スコア: /4

ビジュアル学習ツール

The Two Faces of ¡Qué día!

🌟

Positive

  • Winning
  • Surprises
  • Good weather
  • Love
🌪️

Negative

  • Traffic
  • Deadlines
  • Rain
  • Broken items

練習問題バンク

4 問題
Choose the correct way to write the exclamation. Choose A2

How do you write 'What a day!' in Spanish?

✓ 正解! ✗ おしい! 正解: b

Option 'b' is correct because it includes the opening exclamation mark and the accent on 'Qué' and 'día'.

Complete the sentence with the missing word. Fill Blank A2

¡Qué día ____ largo! No puedo más.

✓ 正解! ✗ おしい! 正解: tan

In Spanish exclamations, we use 'tan' or 'más' before an adjective to add emphasis.

Match the intonation to the situation. situation_matching A2

If you say '¡Qué día!' with a big smile and high pitch, what happened?

✓ 正解! ✗ おしい! 正解: b

A high pitch and a smile indicate a positive, exciting '¡Qué día!'.

Complete the dialogue. dialogue_completion A2

Ana: 'He tenido tres exámenes y he perdido el bus.' Luis: '¡_______! Pobre de ti.'

✓ 正解! ✗ おしい! 正解: Qué día

Luis is empathizing with Ana's difficult day using the standard exclamation.

🎉 スコア: /4

よくある質問

10 問

No! It depends entirely on your tone. If you say it with a smile, it means the day was amazingly good.

Yes, but it's clearer if you say '¡Qué día más bonito!' or '¡Qué buen día!'.

The accent on the 'í' is necessary to show that the 'i' and 'a' are in separate syllables (a hiatus).

Yes, if you have a friendly relationship. It's a common way to acknowledge a shared busy period.

'¡Vaya día!' is slightly more idiomatic and often used when things go wrong, though it can be positive too.

Yes, if a lot has already happened! It implies the day *so far* has been intense.

In formal writing, yes. In casual texting, many natives skip it, but they always keep the accent on 'Qué'.

Not really. You wouldn't say '¡Qué días!'. Instead, you'd say '¡Vaya racha llevo!' (What a streak I'm having!).

You would say: 'Ha sido un día muy productivo' or 'Ha sido una jornada intensa'.

Absolutely. It is universal across all Spanish-speaking countries.

関連フレーズ

🔄

¡Vaya día!

synonym

What a day!

🔄

¡Menudo día!

synonym

What a day!

🔗

¡Qué tiempo!

similar

What weather!

🔗

¡Buen día!

contrast

Good day!

🔗

¡Qué jornada!

specialized form

What a working day!

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