One difference is that lengua is feminine while idioma is masculine. The adjective is masculine when it modifies a mixture of genders as in you example sentence. It must match the nouns in number. In high school, many tongues and languages are taught. Unless mucho (a lot) is being used as an adverb to modify teaching.
vamonos!|ya vĂĄmonos English (US) French (France) German Italian Japanese Korean Polish Portuguese (Brazil) Portuguese (Portugal) Russian Simplified Chinese (China) Spanish (Mexico) Traditional Chinese (Taiwan) Turkish Vietnamese
ir () intransitive verb. 1. (to indicate movement) a. to go. Ayer Ana y yo fuimos al cine.Yesterday, Ana and I went to the movies. 2. (to talk about directions) a. to go. Por aquĂ no se va a la estaciĂłn.This is not the way to go to the station. 3. (to indicate progress)
"Vamos" is present indicative and "vayamos" is present subjunctive But "vamos" is nowadays also a special form of "vayamos", used when the subjunctive replaces the imperative (except in negative forms). So, when you need a subjunctive, use "vayamos"; when you need an imperative, use "vamos" ("vayamos" is also correct, but not much used).