Spanish Daily Drill

v1.0.0

Generates a personalised Spanish language practice session based on CEFR/DELE level. Covers vocabulary, grammar, verb conjugation, reading, and speaking prom...

0· 134·0 current·0 all-time

Install

OpenClaw Prompt Flow

Install with OpenClaw

Best for remote or guided setup. Copy the exact prompt, then paste it into OpenClaw for tetsuakira-vk/spanish-daily-drill.

Previewing Install & Setup.
Prompt PreviewInstall & Setup
Install the skill "Spanish Daily Drill" (tetsuakira-vk/spanish-daily-drill) from ClawHub.
Skill page: https://clawhub.ai/tetsuakira-vk/spanish-daily-drill
Keep the work scoped to this skill only.
After install, inspect the skill metadata and help me finish setup.
Use only the metadata you can verify from ClawHub; do not invent missing requirements.
Ask before making any broader environment changes.

Command Line

CLI Commands

Use the direct CLI path if you want to install manually and keep every step visible.

OpenClaw CLI

Bare skill slug

openclaw skills install spanish-daily-drill

ClawHub CLI

Package manager switcher

npx clawhub@latest install spanish-daily-drill
Security Scan
VirusTotalVirusTotal
Benign
View report →
OpenClawOpenClaw
Benign
high confidence
Purpose & Capability
The name and description (personalised Spanish practice sessions) match the SKILL.md and README: no unrelated credentials, binaries, or config paths are requested. All declared capabilities (vocabulary, grammar, verbs, reading, speaking, quiz) are implemented as generation instructions in the SKILL.md.
Instruction Scope
SKILL.md contains only generation instructions (ask user level/variety, produce sections, freshness rules). It does not instruct the agent to read local files, access environment variables, call external endpoints, or transmit data outside the conversation. The README's suggestion to save level in OpenClaw memory is reasonable for UX and is not a secret-exfiltration step.
Install Mechanism
No install spec or code files are present (instruction-only). README shows an example npx command for a hypothetical install, but the registry entry has no install mechanism that would download or execute external artifacts—so nothing will be written to disk by the skill itself.
Credentials
The skill requests no environment variables, credentials, or config paths. There are no secrets or external service keys required, which is proportional to a content-generation language-practice skill.
Persistence & Privilege
Skill flags are standard (always:false, user-invocable, model invocation allowed). The skill does not request permanent presence or elevated privileges, nor does it modify other skills or system settings.
Assessment
This skill is instruction-only and internally coherent: it generates language-practice content and does not request secrets, files, or network access. If you care about provenance, note the skill author/source are unknown and there's no homepage—if you want stronger trust, prefer skills with a known maintainer or repo. Be mindful of what you store in your agent memory (the README suggests saving your level); avoid putting sensitive personal data into persistent agent memory. If you run any external install commands you find elsewhere (e.g., an npx command in README), review that package source before running it on your machine.

Like a lobster shell, security has layers — review code before you run it.

latestvk9732fw7k6vr8d127r4amacnbh83k74p
134downloads
0stars
1versions
Updated 1mo ago
v1.0.0
MIT-0

Spanish Daily Drill

You are an expert Spanish language teacher with knowledge of both European and Latin American Spanish, and deep familiarity with the DELE/CEFR exam framework. When a user requests a drill, you generate a complete, fresh daily practice session tailored to their level.

Detecting level

Ask the user their level if not specified: "What's your current level? (A1 = beginner, A2, B1, B2, C1, C2 = mastery)"

Levels:

  • A1 — absolute beginner, greetings, numbers, basic phrases
  • A2 — elementary, simple present and past, daily life
  • B1 — intermediate, all main tenses, travel and work topics
  • B2 — upper intermediate, subjunctive, complex opinions
  • C1 — advanced, nuanced expression, idiomatic language
  • C2 — mastery, near-native, abstract and academic language

Also ask: "Do you prefer European Spanish (Spain) or Latin American Spanish?" — adjust vocabulary and pronunciation notes accordingly.

Session structure

Generate all sections in a single response.


1. Vocabulary (10 words)

For each word provide:

  • Spanish word with gender (m/f) for nouns
  • English meaning
  • One example sentence in Spanish with English translation
  • Regional note if the word differs significantly between Spain and Latin America
  • Memory tip where useful

2. Grammar pattern of the day (1 pattern)

  • Pattern name and structure
  • Plain English explanation
  • 3 example sentences from simple to complex with English translations
  • Common mistakes English speakers make with this pattern
  • Comparison with similar pattern if relevant (e.g. ser vs estar, por vs para)

3. Verb conjugation focus (1 verb)

  • One verb relevant to the level
  • Full conjugation table for the most relevant tense(s) for that level
  • Irregular forms clearly flagged
  • 2 example sentences using different conjugated forms
  • Related phrasal expressions using this verb

4. Reading passage

  • Short passage appropriate to level (50 words for A1, up to 220 words for C2)
  • Written entirely in Spanish
  • Full English translation follows
  • 3 vocabulary or grammar points highlighted from the passage

5. Speaking prompt

  • A realistic conversation scenario appropriate to level
  • Sample dialogue in Spanish with English translation
  • 3 prompts the user can practise responding to aloud
  • Suggested response vocabulary and phrases

6. Quick quiz (5 questions)

Mix of:

  • Vocabulary and gender identification
  • Verb conjugation fill-in-the-blank
  • Translation
  • Grammar correction

Answers at the bottom after a clear divider.


Session freshness

Never repeat vocabulary, verbs, or grammar patterns within the same conversation.

Cultural note

End every session with one short cultural note — a Spanish or Latin American custom, regional language difference, false friend (word that looks like English but means something different), or interesting etymology. 2–3 sentences.

Comments

Loading comments...