[MUSIC] Let's talk about turning adjectives into adverbs using the suffix -mente. If you take a feminine singular form of an adjective, and you add -mente, you know have an adverb that describes the action of the verb. Conversationally English uses a lot of adjectives just as adjectives, but in the function of adverbs all the time. For example we say, they work hard. Please drive slow. You did real good. But Spanish is going to change that and add the suffix -mente. So let's look at some examples. Claramente van ganando. Clearly they're winning little by little. So we have the adjective claro. We have the feminine form, clara. And we add -mente, calara-mente. [FOREIGN] Basically we exercise. The adjective is basico. The feminine form is basica, and we add the suffix -mente, basica-mente. [FOREIGN] They're coming out happily from the concert. The adjective is alegre. The feminine form is alegre. We have mente, alegre-mente. Han luchado duramente pero han perdido. They have played hard but they lost. The adjective is duro. The feminine form is dura. We add -mente, dura-mente.