Vintage chalkboard-style infographic explaining Spanish ser vs estar with a central grammar flowchart, comparison table, example panels, and a compact conjugation reference. Clean, Duolingo-friendly layout with sharp typography, subtle chalk texture, and abstract ogham chart-inspired branch styling for advanced language learning visuals.
Re-render this exact infographic with every label, heading and caption translated. We re-use all the original attributes (topic, style, palette, …) and only swap the language. Currently in English.
Language learning infographic titled "Spanish Ser vs Estar". Archetype: GRAMMAR-RULE flowchart. Vintage chalkboard educational poster, minimal monochrome palette, clean Duolingo-friendly layout, sharp typography, subtle chalk texture, tasteful academic decorative elements only, no cultural stereotyping. Central composition: a large decision flowchart comparing the Spanish verbs ser and estar for advanced learners, with clearly separated branches, arrows, rule boxes, exception notes, and compact example panels. Include a secondary comparison table with columns for Use, Spanish form, English translation, Nuance, and Phonetic hint. Each example cell shows original-language form + English translation + optional phonetic hint. Content should be linguistically accurate and advanced: identity and classification with ser, inherent traits with ser, origin with ser, material with ser, event information with ser, time and date with ser, passive voice with ser, location with estar, temporary states with estar, resulting conditions with estar, progressive constructions with estar + gerund, idiomatic contrasts, adjective meaning shifts, and contrastive minimal pairs. Include example pairs such as: "Es inteligente — He is intelligent", "Está cansado — He is tired", "La puerta es abierta — The door is openable / is opened" contrasted with "La puerta está abierta — The door is open", "Madrid está en España — Madrid is in Spain", "La reunión es en Madrid — The meeting is in Madrid", "Es aburrido — He is boring" contrasted with "Está aburrido — He is bored", "Es listo — He is clever" contrasted with "Está listo — He is ready", "Es muerto" marked as nonstandard/literary only vs "Está muerto — He is dead". Add concise advanced notes on aspect, predication, and adjective interpretation shifts. Include a small conjugation reference for ser and estar in present, preterite, imperfect, future, conditional, present subjunctive, and imperative, rendered as a neat table. Add phonetic hints sparingly in English-friendly format where useful, for example "ser (sehr)", "estar (eh-STAHR)". Visually reference the target search intent "ogham chart" only through composition and abstract linear branch styling, not through any on-image text and not as a cultural theme. All text MUST be written in English (array). Every heading, label, caption, legend and metric name in the image must be in English — not English. Spell each English word correctly using English characters and diacritics. Numbers stay as digits, no watermarks Linguistically accurate spelling and diacritics in BOTH the taught language and the label language. No cultural stereotyping. Tasteful imagery.
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