cuál es la economía de venezuela: La política económica en Venezuela Guerra Brito Guerra, 2004 |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: The Oil Curse Michael L. Ross, 2013-09-08 Explaining—and solving—the oil curse in the developing world Countries that are rich in petroleum have less democracy, less economic stability, and more frequent civil wars than countries without oil. What explains this oil curse? And can it be fixed? In this groundbreaking analysis, Michael L. Ross looks at how developing nations are shaped by their mineral wealth—and how they can turn oil from a curse into a blessing. Ross traces the oil curse to the upheaval of the 1970s, when oil prices soared and governments across the developing world seized control of their countries' oil industries. Before nationalization, the oil-rich countries looked much like the rest of the world; today, they are 50 percent more likely to be ruled by autocrats—and twice as likely to descend into civil war—than countries without oil. The Oil Curse shows why oil wealth typically creates less economic growth than it should; why it produces jobs for men but not women; and why it creates more problems in poor states than in rich ones. It also warns that the global thirst for petroleum is causing companies to drill in increasingly poor nations, which could further spread the oil curse. This landmark book explains why good geology often leads to bad governance, and how this can be changed. |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Social Security Dean Baker, Mark Weisbrot, 1999 An argument is made that social security is under threat from its implied rescuers due to a national frenzy and economically-motivated political manipulation. |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: The Orange Economy Inter American Development Bank, Iván Duque Márquez, Pedro Felipe Buitrago Restrepo, 2013-10-01 This manual has been designed and written with the purpose of introducing key concepts and areas of debate around the creative economy, a valuable development opportunity that Latin America, the Caribbean and the world at large cannot afford to miss. The creative economy, which we call the Orange Economy in this book (you'll see why), encompasses the immense wealth of talent, intellectual property, interconnectedness, and, of course, cultural heritage of the Latin American and Caribbean region (and indeed, every region). At the end of this manual, you will have the knowledge base necessary to understand and explain what the Orange Economy is and why it is so important. You will also acquire the analytical tools needed to take better advantage of opportunities across the arts, heritage, media, and creative services. |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Venezuela Before Chávez Ricardo Hausmann, Francisco R. Rodríguez, 2015-06-13 At the beginning of the twentieth century, Venezuela had one of the poorest economies in Latin America, but by 1970 it had become the richest country in the region and one of the twenty richest countries in the world, ahead of countries such as Greece, Israel, and Spain. Between 1978 and 2001, however, Venezuela’s economy went sharply in reverse, with non-oil GDP declining by almost 19 percent and oil GDP by an astonishing 65 percent. What accounts for this drastic turnabout? The editors of Venezuela Before Chávez, who each played a policymaking role in the country’s economy during the past two decades, have brought together a group of economists and political scientists to examine systematically the impact of a wide range of factors affecting the economy’s collapse, from the cost of labor regulation and the development of financial markets to the weakening of democratic governance and the politics of decisions about industrial policy. Aside from the editors, the contributors are Omar Bello, Adriana Bermúdez, Matías Braun, Javier Corrales, Jonathan Di John, Rafael Di Tella, Javier Donna, Samuel Freije, Dan Levy, Robert MacCulloch, Osmel Manzano, Francisco Monaldi, María Antonia Moreno, Daniel Ortega, Michael Penfold, José Pineda, Lant Pritchett, Cameron A. Shelton, and Dean Yang. |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Venezuela: La crisis vista desde sus debilidades Maibort Petit, 2010-07-30 Ensayo del año 2008 en eltema Economía de las empresas - Política económica, Nota: 100, Universidad Central de Venezuela (Instituto de Estudios Políticos), Materia: Doctorado en Ciencias Políticas, Idioma: Español, Resumen: La última década del siglo XX y los inicios del siglo XXI, encuentra a Venezuela con propensiones de índole cultural, económicas, sociales y políticas dirigidas hacia la centralización, la estatización y el rentismo petrolero, que se han ido fortaleciendo en la medida que la renta petrolera crece. Así parecieran ir las cosas, a pesar del enorme esfuerzo emprendido para revertir esa tendencia, que supuso la elección de gobernadores y alcaldes, directamente por el pueblo y la transferencia de ingentes recursos a las regiones y a las administradoras locales por la vía del Fides y aquella otra de la Ley de Asignaciones Especiales que permitieron avances en el área de la descentralización y desconcentración en el ámbito de educación, salud y vialidad... Para finales de 1988 y comienzos de 1989, Venezuela experimentó una de las más graves crisis de su historia política, económica y social: La alteración de la llamada paz social que había regido, desde los sesenta sin otras interrupciones que la episódica lucha armada y la consecuente pacificación; el deterioro del ambiente urbano por la expansión de las áreas marginadas; la barrera de la producción agrícola dramáticamente ineficiente, luego del auge artificial creado por los subsidios del gobierno; la ineficiencia de los servicios públicos prestados por el Estado ( entre ellos la telefonía, salud pública, seguridad y vivienda para los sectores humildes); la interrupción de la inversión pública y privada además de la compulsiva tendencia a importar y no a producir; la corrupción administrativa. Todas estas fuerzas avanzaban firmemente desde comienzos de los setenta, con una conclusión penosa que soliviantaba los espíritus, a la sazón, la pobreza de la población, lo que sería atribuido, no a las políticas económicas tradicionales, o a los gobiernos incompetentes, sino a la democracia misma, en un rasgo que ha sido catastrófico para el desenvolvimiento de América Latina: Confundir la democracia con los gobiernos. La situación de la crisis había planteado una polémica en los medios ilustrados, más atentos a la espectacularidad que a la análisis científico, y manejada, en los medios políticos, sin examinar su naturaleza u ontología, como si se tratara de otro capítulo mas de la misma novela democrática. Urgía reformar al Estado, la economía y las instituciones y reeducar u orientar a la sociedad hacia un nuevo modelo. |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: FOREIGN EXCHANGE POLICY IN VENEZUELA. More Than 100 Years of History Pedro A. Palma, 2021-02-18 This book of Professor Pedro A. Palma is devoted to study and analyze the Foreign Exchange Policy in Venezuela during the past 100 years. |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: The Dynamics of Political Discourse Anita Fetzer, Elda Weizman, Lawrence N. Berlin, 2015-08-15 Rethinking Sinclair and Coulthard’s sequentiality-based notion of the follow-up, this volume explores its forms and communicative functions in traditional and contemporary modes of communication (parliamentary sessions, interviews, debates, speeches, op-eds, discussion forums and Twitter) wherein political actors address challenges to their political agenda and to their political face. In so doing, the volume achieves two major advances. First, its contributions expand the understanding of follow-ups beyond the traditional focus on structural sequentiality, considering communicative function as a defining feature of a follow-up. Second, it broadens the understanding of what constitutes political discourse, as not being limited to a single discourse, but also being able to span multiple discourses of different forms and speech events over time. |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Analisis socio-económico de Venezuela Eduardo J. Ortiz, 2008 |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: La nueva economía venezolana Fernando Spiritto, 2018-03-27 Venezuela atraviesa una situación de mucha gravedad. El conjunto de problemas que sufre es abrumador: crisis económica,conflictividad política sin visos de acuerdo entre las partes para liberar las presiones e implementar las medidas económicas correctivas, criminalidad, pérdida de capital humano por la emigración creciente, aislamiento internacional... Las distorsiones de la economía venezolana son la consecuencia del sistema de controles y del manejo inadecuado del ingreso petrolero. Pero más que ante una falla producida por una mala administración, estamos ante la quiebra del modelo de desarrollo. No es solamente que las autoridades cometieron errores al gastar la totalidad del ingreso petrolero del boom 2003-2014 sin ahorrar para los malos tiempos, sino que las instituciones que hoy gobiernan la economía ya no tienen vigencia. En este sentido, a las medidas que deben tomarse ante el colapso del modelo rentista petrolero, de inspiración socialista, deben sumarse nuevas instituciones, capaces de regir la economía para evitar las crisis recurrentes y poner al país en el camino del crecimiento sostenido. Lo anterior resume los objetivos de este libro, el cual es un aporte de la Fundación Konrad Adenauer y del Instituto de Estudios Parlamentarios Fermín Toro al complejo y duro proceso de recuperación económica de Venezuela. En él intervienen Henning Suhr, José Guerra, Diego Bautista Urbaneja, Asdrúbal Oliveros, Carlos Miguel Álvarez, Fernando Spiritto, Luis Oliveros, José Manuel Rodríguez-Grille, Rafael J. Ávila D., Ronald Balza Guanipa, Sary Levy Carciente, Ruth de Krivoy, Tamara Herrera, Maikel Bello, Pedro Rosas, Francisco Rojas, Roberto Casanova y Ramón Guillermo Aveledo. Esperamos que de sus páginas salga información útil que ayude a encontrar caminos expeditos para alcanzar un crecimiento económico sostenido e igualitario. |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: The Austrian School Jesús Huerta de Soto, 2008 Presents an exposition of the main tenets of the Austrian School of Economics. This book also explains the differences between the Austrian and the neoclassical (including the Chicago School) approaches to economics. It covers reviews of the contributions of the main Austrian economists, and analysis of the major objections to Austrian economics. |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Gatewatching Axel Bruns, 2005 Gatewatching: Collaborative Online News Production is the first comprehensive study of the latest wave of online news publications. The book investigates the collaborative publishing models of key news Websites, ranging from the worldwide Indymedia network to the massively successful technology news site Slashdot, and further to the multitude of Weblogs that have emerged in recent years. Building on collaborative approaches borrowed from the open source software development community, this book illustrates how gatewatching provides an alternative to gatekeeping and other traditional journalistic models of reporting, and has enabled millions of users around the world to participate in the online news publishing process. |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Progress, Poverty and Exclusion Rosemary Thorp, 1998 A comprehensive Statistical Appendix provides regional and country-by-country data in such areas as GDP, manufacturing, sector productivity, prices, trade, income distribution and living standards.--BOOK JACKET. |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Socialism, Economic Calculation and Entrepreneurship Jes£s Huerta de Soto, 2010-01-01 This highly topical book presents a new theory on the characteristics of entrepreneurial knowledge. It explores the recent shift among professional economists and scholars in their evaluation of the debate of socialism. Socialism, Economic Calculation and Entrepreneurship presents an application of Israel M. Kirzner's theory of entrepreneurship to the theory of the impossibility of socialism. It discusses the influence of the fall of socialism, with particular reference to the evolution of economic thought. |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Barrio Rising Prof. Alejandro Velasco, 2015-07-24 Beginning in the late 1950s political leaders in Venezuela built what they celebrated as Latin America’s most stable democracy. But outside the staid halls of power, in the gritty barrios of a rapidly urbanizing country, another politics was rising—unruly, contentious, and clamoring for inclusion. Based on years of archival and ethnographic research in Venezuela’s largest public housing community, Barrio Rising delivers the first in-depth history of urban popular politics before the Bolivarian Revolution, providing crucial context for understanding the democracy that emerged during the presidency of Hugo Chávez. In the mid-1950s, a military government bent on modernizing Venezuela razed dozens of slums in the heart of the capital Caracas, replacing them with massive buildings to house the city’s working poor. The project remained unfinished when the dictatorship fell on January 23, 1958, and in a matter of days city residents illegally occupied thousands of apartments, squatted on green spaces, and renamed the neighborhood to honor the emerging democracy: the 23 de Enero (January 23). During the next thirty years, through eviction efforts, guerrilla conflict, state violence, internal strife, and official neglect, inhabitants of el veintitrés learned to use their strategic location and symbolic tie to the promise of democracy in order to demand a better life. Granting legitimacy to the state through the vote but protesting its failings with violent street actions when necessary, they laid the foundation for an expansive understanding of democracy—both radical and electoral—whose features still resonate today. Blending rich narrative accounts with incisive analyses of urban space, politics, and everyday life, Barrio Rising offers a sweeping reinterpretation of modern Venezuelan history as seen not by its leaders but by residents of one of the country’s most distinctive popular neighborhoods. |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: China on the Ground in Latin America E. Ellis, 2014-09-04 An analysis of the new physical presence of Chinese companies operating in Latin America and the Caribbean, the associated challenges that they face, and how they are impacting the region and its relationship with the PRC. |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Designing for Virtual Communities in the Service of Learning Sasha Barab, Rob Kling, James H. Gray, 2004-03-29 Publisher Description |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Decomposing World Income Distribution Branko Milanovic, Shlomo Yitzhaki, 2004 In Asia inequality in income between countries is more important than inequality within countries. In Africa, Latin America, and Western Europe and North America, by contrast, there are only small differences between countries; inequality within countries is more important. And when countries are divided into three groups by income level, there is little overlap - very few people in developing countries have incomes in the range of those in the rich countries. Using national income and expenditure distribution data from 119 countries, Milanovic and Yitzhaki decompose total income inequality between the individuals in the world, by continent and by region (countries grouped by income level). They use a Gini decomposition that allows for an exact breakdown (without a residual term) of the overall Gini by recipients. Looking first at income inequality in income between countries is more important than inequality within countries. Africa, Latin America, and Western Europe and North America are quite homogeneous continents, with small differences between countries (so that most of the inequality on these continents is explained by inequality within countries). Next the authors divide the world into three groups: the rich G7 countries (and those with similar income levels), the less developed countries (those with per capita income less than or equal to Brazil's), and the middle-income countries (those with per capita income between Brazil's and Italy's). They find little overlap between such groups - very few people in developing countries have incomes in the range of those in the rich countries. This paper - a product of tPoverty and Human Resources, Development Research Group - is part of a larger effort in the group to study inequality and income redistribution. |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Aspectos del desarrollo económico de Venezuela Domingo Felipe Maza Zavala, 1962 |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Beyond Left and Right Anthony Giddens, 2013-08-23 How should one understand the nature and possibilities of political radicalism today? The political radical is normally thought of as someone who stands on the left, opposing backward-looking conservatism. In the present day, however, the left has turned defensive, while the right has become radical, advocating the free play of market forces no matter what obstacles of tradition or custom stand in their way. What explains such a curious twist of perspective? In answering this question Giddens develops a new framework for radical politics, drawing freely on what he calls philosophic conservatism, but applying this outlook in the service of values normally associated with the Left. The ecological crisis is at the core of this analysis, but is understood by Giddens in an unconventional way - as a response to a world in which modernity has run up against its limits as a social and moral order. The end of nature, as an entity existing independently of human intervention, and the end of tradition, combined with the impact of globalization, are the forces which now have to be confronted, made use of and coped with. This book provides a powerful interpretation of the rise of fundamentalism, of democracy, the persistence of gender divisions and the question of a normative political theory of violence. It will be essential reading for anyone seeking a novel approach to the political challenges which we face at the turn of the twenty-first century. |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: City Design, Planning & Policy Innovations Tomas Bermudez, Diane E. Davis, Tatiana Gallego-Lizón, Sarah Benton, Andrés Blanco Blanco, David Razu, Diego Arcia, Enrique Silva, Gabriela Soto Laveaga, Douglas Barrios, Miguel Ángel Santos, Juan Santamaría, Rubén Segovia, Jorge Silva, Claudia Tomateo, Felipe Vera, Cesar Castro, Neha B. Joseph, Konstantina Tzemou, Patricia Álvarez, Theodore Kofman, Samuel Matthew, Aaron Ramirez, Andreina Seijas, Claire Summers, Kate Wolf, Diana Zwetzich, Belinda Tato, Jorge Toledo, José Luis Vallejo, Adriana Chávez, Daniel Stagno, 2019-07-02 This publication summarizes the outcomes and lessons learned from the Fall 2017 course titled “Emergent Urbanism: Planning and Design Visions for the City of Hermosillo, Mexico” (ADV-9146). Taught by professors Diane Davis and Felipe Vera, this course asked a group of 12 students to design a set of projects that could lay the groundwork for a sustainable future for the city of Hermosillo—an emerging city located in northwest Mexico and the capital of the state of Sonora. Part of a larger initiative funded by the Inter-American Development Bank and the North-American Development Bank in partnership with Harvard University, ideas developed for this class were the product of collaboration between faculty and students at the Graduate School of Design, the Kennedy School’s Center for International Development and the T.H. Chan School of Public Health. |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Crecimiento económico en Venezuela José Gregorio Pineda, Francisco Sáez, 2006 |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Ecosystem Services, Biodiversity and Environmental Change in a Tropical Mountain Ecosystem of South Ecuador Jörg Bendix, Erwin Beck, Achim Bräuning, Franz Makeschin, Reinhard Mosandl, Stefan Scheu, Wolfgang Wilcke, 2013-07-09 An interdisciplinary research unit consisting of 30 teams in the natural, economic and social sciences analyzed biodiversity and ecosystem services of a mountain rainforest ecosystem in the hotspot of the tropical Andes, with special reference to past, current and future environmental changes. The group assessed ecosystem services using data from ecological field and scenario-driven model experiments, and with the help of comparative field surveys of the natural forest and its anthropogenic replacement system for agriculture. The book offers insights into the impacts of environmental change on various service categories mentioned in the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (2005): cultural, regulating, supporting and provisioning ecosystem services. Examples focus on biodiversity of plants and animals including trophic networks, and abiotic/biotic parameters such as soils, regional climate, water, nutrient and sediment cycles. The types of threats considered include land use and climate changes, as well as atmospheric fertilization. In terms of regulating and provisioning services, the emphasis is primarily on water regulation and supply as well as climate regulation and carbon sequestration. With regard to provisioning services, the synthesis of the book provides science-based recommendations for a sustainable land use portfolio including several options such as forestry, pasture management and the practices of indigenous peoples. In closing, the authors show how they integrated the local society by pursuing capacity building in compliance with the CBD-ABS (Convention on Biological Diversity - Access and Benefit Sharing), in the form of education and knowledge transfer for application. |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: South American Contributions to World Archaeology Mariano Bonomo, Sonia Archila, 2021-11-08 This book focuses on South American archaeology and its contributions to the broader global archaeological discussion in theory, methods and new interpretations of the archaeological record. These include discussions on human peopling and colonization of the continent, domestication of plants and emergence of complex societies. This volume covers a wide variety of sub-disciplines in archaeology, including archaeobotany, zooarchaeology, molecular archaeology, bioarchaeology, geoarchaeology. The chapters span from the pre-Columbian to contemporaneous indigenous societies for all the main geographical and ecological zones of South America. The book discusses how particular cases of South American archaeology have contributed to the understanding of a global and basic issue: human relations with their environments and landscapes during the past. The authors focus on the latest results produced by multidisciplinary studies carried out at archaeological sites in several areas of South America ranging from studies of early hunter-gatherers through the historic period. This work would be of interest to researchers in archaeology and Latin American studies. |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Economía, instituciones financieras y dinero Antonio Aguirre, 2003 |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Oil Prices and the Global Economy Mr.Rabah Arezki, Zoltan Jakab, Mr.Douglas Laxton, Mr.Akito Matsumoto, Armen Nurbekyan, Hou Wang, Jiaxiong Yao, 2017-01-27 This paper presents a simple macroeconomic model of the oil market. The model incorporates features of oil supply such as depletion, endogenous oil exploration and extraction, as well as features of oil demand such as the secular increase in demand from emerging-market economies, usage efficiency, and endogenous demand responses. The model provides, inter alia, a useful analytical framework to explore the effects of: a change in world GDP growth; a change in the efficiency of oil usage; and a change in the supply of oil. Notwithstanding that shale oil production today is more responsive to prices than conventional oil, our analysis suggests that an era of prolonged low oil prices is likely to be followed by a period where oil prices overshoot their long-term upward trend. |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Ciclo De Eventos Venezuela Agricola Siglo XXI: Bases Para Un Programa Nacional Concertado , |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Los Gremios Agropecuarios Ante Los Procesos de Camdio en la Agricultura , |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Ciclo de Eventos "venezuela Agricola Siglo Xxi: Bases Para Programa Nacional Concertado" Segundo Evento , |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Host Bibliographic Record for Boundwith Item Barcode 30112117732716 and Others , 1917 |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: El desastre de 1812 en Venezuela Rogelio Altez, 2006 |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: El desarrollo económico de Venezuela World Bank, 1961 |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Boomerang Chavez Emili Blasco, 2016-06-15 The institutional, economic, and social breakdown of Venezuela is not the result of the dismantling of Hugo Chávez's legacy, but rather a result of his policies. It is like a boomerang which, as it returns to the person that throws it, shatters the glass in which the father of the Bolivarian revolution saw himself: from benefactor to the poor to culprit for the great shortages, inflation, and violence which buffets the country, especially its lower class-scarcity of basic goods, long lines at stores, widespread crime... Chavismo was very much of a fraud from the outset: transfer of sovereignty to Cuba, electoral deceit, unprecedented economic corruption, narco-state... |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Convergencia económica y hechos estilizados en Venezuela 1950-95 Yohan Villegas Pérez, 2000 |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Natural Resources and Economic Growth Marc Badia-Miró, Vicente Pinilla, Henry Willebald, 2015-05-22 The relationship between natural capital and economic growth is an open debate in the field of economic development. Is an abundance of natural resources a blessing or a curse for economic performance? The field of Economic History offers an excellent vantage to explore the relevance of institutions, technical progress and supply-demand drivers. Natural Resources and Economic Growth contains theoretical and empirical articles by leading scholars who have studied this subject in different historical periods from the 19th century to the present day and in different parts of the world. Part I presents the theoretical issues and discusses the meaning of the curse and the relevance of the historical perspective. Part II captures the diversity of experiences, presenting thirteen independent case studies based on historical results from North and South America, Africa, Asia, Oceania and Europe. This book emphasizes that an abundance of natural resources is not a fixed situation. It is a process that reacts to changes in the structure of commodity prices and factor endowments, and progress requires capital, labour, technical change and appropriate institutional arrangements. This abundance is not a given, but is part of the evolution of the economic system. History shows that institutional quality is the key factor to deal with abundant natural resources and, especially, with the rents derived from their use and exploitation. This wide ranging volume will be of great relevance to all those with an interest in economic history, development, economic growth, natural resources, world history and institutional economics. |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Gobiernos alternativos de la región andina y perspectivas de la CAN Heinrich Meyer, Consuelo Ahumada, 2006 |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Venezuela Alfredo Avello Fajardo, 2018-06-15 Venezuela sobrevive a duras penas en la actualidad. Padece una crisis humanitaria sin precedentes en su historia. Es una sociedad que convulsiona diariamente y en silencio. Se enfrenta a un gobierno que desconoce las reglas democráticas, a un ejército que defiende a un proyecto político ajeno a su constitución, a una policía que dispersa con sus armas cuanta manifestación de protesta se dirimen en sus calles, a un hampa que termina por apropiarse de los escasos recursos que hoy le ha quedado a su población, a brujos traídos para sostener al gobierno. En síntesis, a un futuro incierto. ¿Cómo se originó todo esto? ¿Pudo haberse evitado o corregido? ¿Fue el fruto de la intencionalidad? La obra ha sido desarrollada inicialmente en Venezuela (2008) y terminada por el autor en el exilio en los EEUU (2017). La misma trasciende desde el marco familiar del autor hasta la sociedad, mostrando el rostro del conflicto, desde la teoría de la razón, la conflictividad y la espiral del silencio, entre otras. Al mismo tiempo, se examinan importantes obras de investigadores, escritores y profesionales, junto a las redes sociales, que fertilizan los análisis y los puntos de vistas tratados. |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: La crisis económica de Venezuela Oscar A. Echevarría Salvat, 1983 |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Geografía económica de Venezuela Piar Martínez Natera, 1983 |
cuál es la economía de venezuela: Historia Económica Y Social de Venezuela Federico Brito Figueroa, 1973 |
Cuál | Spanish to English Translation - SpanishDiction…
Translate Cuál. See 5 authoritative translations of Cuál in English with example sentences, phrases and …
Qué vs Cuál - When to Use "What" and “Which” in Spanish
I can almost glean my answer from your great explanation and all the comments/answers, but just to be sure: Do I use ‘cual’ for “in which photo?” As in: En cual foto estoy caminando? En …
When do you use 'qué', 'cuál' or 'cuáles'? - Easy Learning ...
5 days ago · qué, cómo, cuál and cuáles can all be used to mean what although qué is the most common equivalent:. use qué or cómo when asking someone to repeat something that you didn’t …
Cuál vs Qué: What’s the Difference?
Feb 20, 2021 · Requesting Information: Meaning/Definition qué es: Name/Identity cuál es: Choosing an Element From a Group: Heterogeneous, infinite group qué + verb: …
Cuál vs Qué: Key Differences You Need to Know - Tell Me I…
Feb 22, 2025 · Cuál vs qué is a topic that often confuses Spanish learners. Qué inquires about definitions, time, explanations, or identifies something. It’s the direct translation of ‘what’. …
Cuál | Spanish to English Translation - SpanishDictionary.com
Translate Cuál. See 5 authoritative translations of Cuál in English with example sentences, phrases and audio pronunciations.
Qué vs Cuál - When to Use "What" and “Which” in Spanish
I can almost glean my answer from your great explanation and all the comments/answers, but just to be sure: Do I use ‘cual’ for “in which photo?” As in: En cual foto estoy caminando? En cual …
When do you use 'qué', 'cuál' or 'cuáles'? - Easy Learning ...
5 days ago · qué, cómo, cuál and cuáles can all be used to mean what although qué is the most common equivalent:. use qué or cómo when asking someone to repeat something that you …
Cuál vs Qué: What’s the Difference?
Feb 20, 2021 · Requesting Information: Meaning/Definition qué es: Name/Identity cuál es: Choosing an Element From a Group: Heterogeneous, infinite group qué + verb: …
Cuál vs Qué: Key Differences You Need to Know - Tell Me In ...
Feb 22, 2025 · Cuál vs qué is a topic that often confuses Spanish learners. Qué inquires about definitions, time, explanations, or identifies something. It’s the direct translation of ‘what’. Cuál …
Qué vs Cuál In Spanish: How Are They Different?
How to use cuál de. If you have heard Spanish speakers using cuál or cuáles de and want to know how this differs from the word cuál, here’s an explanation.. When you use the …
cuál - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
May 31, 2025 · There are certain times where cuál would translate as "what" in English and qué would translate as "which". This can confuse English speakers. As a general rule, when using …
‘Qué’ vs ‘cuál’: What is the difference?
Apr 2, 2025 · 'Qué' and 'cuál' can both be translated to English as “what” or “which,” which makes the distinction between these two a challenging one. However, each one pairs up with specific …
"Qué" vs. "Cuál" | SpanishDictionary.com
Expert articles and interactive video lessons on how to use the Spanish language. Learn about 'por' vs. 'para', Spanish pronunciation, typing Spanish accents, and more.
The Difference Between Qué and Cuál - Speak Spanish Faster
Another common question we receive involves cual and que without the accent mark. Remember, in Spanish, whenever you see an accent over qué or cuál it usually means a question is being …