Spanish language
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Spanish español, castellano |
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|---|---|---|
| Spoken in: | Some parts of Europe, most of Central America and South America, some parts of North America and the Caribbean, some parts of North Africa, (particularly Morocco) and Equatorial Guinea, as well as enclaves and immigrant groups on all continents; also, roughly 2,000 people still speak Spanish in the Philippines, a former Spanish possession in Asia for more than 300 years. | |
| Total speakers: | 410 million, 390 million of whom are native speakers | |
| Ranking: | 2–4 (varying estimates) | |
| Language family: | Indo-European Italic Romance Italo-Western Gallo-Iberian Ibero-Romance West Iberian Spanish |
|
| Official status | ||
| Official language of: | Spain, Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Equatorial Guinea, European Union, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Puerto Rico, United Nations, Uruguay, and Venezuela. | |
| Regulated by: | Asociación de Academias de la Lengua Española (Real Academia Española and 21 other national Spanish language academies) | |
| Language codes | ||
| ISO 639-1: | es | |
| ISO 639-2: | spa | |
| ISO/FDIS 639-3: | spa | |
|
with major to minor Spanish-speaking countries or regions. |
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| Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. See IPA chart for English for an English-based pronunciation key. | ||
Spanish (español) or Castilian (castellano) is an Iberian Romance language. It was spoken by roughly 364 million people in the year 2000 [1][2]. Current estimation accounts up to 410 million, making Spanish the most widely spoken Romance language.
Spanish originated as an obscure dialect in the Cantabria region of Spain[citation needed]; from that region, its use gradually spread to the kingdom of Castile, where it became the principal language of government and trade. It was later brought to the Western Hemisphere and other parts of the world in the last five centuries by Spanish explorers, colonists and empire-builders. Spanish is one of six official working languages of the United Nations and one of the most used global languages, along with English. It is spoken on all continents, most extensively in North and South America, Europe, and certain parts of Africa, Asia and Oceania. Within the globalized market, there is currently an international expansion and recognition of the Spanish language in literature, the film industry, television (notably telenovelas) and mostly music.
Contents |
Naming
Spanish people tend to call this language español when contrasting it with languages of other states (e.g., in a list with French and English), but call it castellano (Castilian, from the Castile region) when contrasting it with other languages of Spain (such as Galician, Basque, and Catalan/Valencian). In this manner, the Spanish Constitution of 1978 uses the term castellano to define the official language of the whole State, opposed to las demás lenguas españolas (lit. the other Spanish languages). Article III reads as follows:
- El castellano es la lengua española oficial del Estado. (…) Las demás lenguas españolas serán también oficiales en las respectivas Comunidades Autónomas…
- Castilian is the official Spanish language of the State. (…) The other Spanish languages shall also be official in the respective Autonomous Communities…
In some parts of Spain, mainly where people speak Galician, Basque and Catalan, the choice of words reveals the speakers' sense of belonging and their political views. People from bilingual areas might consider it offensive to call the language español, as that is the term that was chosen by Francisco Franco — during whose dictatorship the use of regional languages was discouraged— and because it connotes that Basque, Catalan and Galician are not languages of Spain. On the other hand, more nationalist speakers (both Spanish and regional nationalists) might prefer español either to reflect their belief in the unity of the Spanish State or to denote the perceived detachment between their region and the rest of the State. However, most people in Spain, regardless of place of origin, use Spanish or Castilian indistinctively.
For the rest of the Spanish-speaking world, speakers of the language in many areas refer to it as español, and in only a few castellano is more common. Castellano is the name given to the Spanish language in Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Ecuador, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela.
Some philologists use Castilian only when speaking of the language spoken in Castile during the Middle Ages, stating that it is preferable to use Spanish for its modern form. The subdialect of Spanish spoken in most parts of modern day Castile can also be called Castilian. This dialect differs from those of other regions of Spain (Andalusia for example); the Castilian dialect is almost exactly the same as standard Spanish.
Some Spanish speakers consider "castellano" a generic term with no political or ideological links, much as "Spanish" is in English.
Related languages
Spanish/Castilian has closest affinity to the other Spanish languages (from Latin) and dialects (from Spanish itself) spoken within current borders of Spain. Most are mutually intelligible among speakers without too much difficulty.
- Aragonese (aragonés)
- Leonese (llïonés)
- Asturian (asturianu)
- Galician (galego)
- Portuguese (português)
- Extremaduran (estremeñu)
- Catalan (català)
- Occitan (aranès)
- Ladino (Djudeo-espanyol, sefardí)
Comparisons between Spanish and other languages
Spanish has different common features with Catalan, an East-Iberian language which exhibits many Gallo-Romance traits. As with Portuguese, Spanish morphology and phonetics are much easier for a Catalan speaker to understand than the other way around. Catalan is more similar to Occitan than Spanish and Portuguese are to each other.
| Spanish | Latin | Portuguese | Catalan | English | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| nosotros | nos | nós | nosaltres | we(-others) | Quebec French: nous autres |
| hermano | germānum | irmão | germà | brother | |
| martes | dies Martis (Classical) |
terça-feira (Ecclesiastical tertia feria) |
dimarts | Tuesday | French: mardi |
| canción | cantiōnem | canção | cançó | song | French: chanson |
| más | magis or plus | mais (archaically also chus) |
més | more | French plus, Italian più, Romanian mai |
| mano izquierda | manūm sinistram | mão esquerda, sinistra (archaically also sẽestra) |
mà esquerra | left hand | Basque: esku ezkerra |
| nada | nullam rem natam (lit. no thing born) |
nada (archaically also rem) |
res | nothing | French: rien |
Comparison between Spanish and other Romance languages
Spanish and Italian share a very similar phonological system and do not differ very much in grammar, vocabulary and above all morphology. Speakers of both languages can communicate relatively well: at present, the lexical similarity with Italian is estimated at 82%. As a result, Spanish and Italian are mutually intelligible to various degrees. Spanish is less mutually intelligible with French and with Romanian. The writing systems of the four languages allow for a greater amount of interlingual reading comprehension than oral communication would.
Portuguese
Between the two main languages spoken on the Iberian Peninsula, Spanish and Portuguese, there is generally a mutual understanding between the standard spoken forms, though Spanish morphology and phonetics is much easier for a Portuguese speaker to understand than vice versa. The lexical similarity Spanish has with Portuguese is estimated at 89%.
Both Spanish and Portuguese share similar grammars and a majority of vocabulary as well as a common history of influence of Arabic while a great part of the peninsula was under Islamic rule (both languages expanded over Islamic territories).
The diphthongization of short stressed vowels is common in Spanish as well as the other Romance languages, but absent in Galician-Portuguese.
- Lat. moritur ("he/she dies"), It. muore, Fr. meurt / muert, Sp. muere, Port. morre, Rom. moare
- Peculiar to Spanish (as in the Gascon dialect of Occitan, possibly due to Basque substratum) is the loss of Latin initial /f/ when the next vowel does not diphthongate: compare e.g. Sp. hijo with Ladino fijo, Fr. fils, It. figlio, Port. filho, Occitan filh and Gascon hilh; also Sp. hablar, Ladino favlar, Port. falar, but Sp./Ladino fuego, Port. fogo.
- The consonant clusters cl, fl, pl of Latin became ll in Spanish, but ch in Portuguese: cf. Lat. clamare, acc. flammam, plenum; Sp. llamar, llama, lleno; Ladino lyamar, flama, pleno; Port. chamar, chama, cheio.
- The consonant clusters ct and lt of Latin became ch in Spanish, but produced diphthongs in Portuguese: cf. Lat. acc. octo, noctem, multum; Sp. ocho, noche, mucho; Ladino ocho, noche, muncho; Port. oito, noite, muito.
- The palatal consonants ll and ñ of Spanish typically originated in Latin ll, nn, whereas Portuguese lh, nh of Portuguese were derived from Latin li, ni: cf. Lat. acc. alium, Junium, annum, gallinam, Port. alho, junho, ano, galinha, Sp. ajo, junio, año, gallina.(The Spanish letter ñ /ɲ/ was initially a shorthand for nn.)
- Spanish retained single intervocalic /l/ and /n/, which were usually elided in early Portuguese: cf. Lat. acc. caelum, volare, Sp. cielo, volar, Port. céu, voar.
Some very common words are also very different between the two: Sp. ventana (Lat. vĕntu), Ladino fenestra (Lat. fenĕstra), Port. janela (jānuella), "window"; Sp./Ladino rodilla (rŏtella), Port. joelho (genucŭlu), "knee"; Sp. calle (callis), Port. rua ([via] ruga), "street"; Sp. alfombra (Arab. alḥánbal), Port. tapete (Lat. tapēte), "carpet"; Sp. borrar (Sp. borra), Port. apagar (Lat. adpācāre), "to erase"; Sp. olvidar (oblītare), Port. esquecer (excadĕscere), "to forget".
Ladino
Ladino, which is essentially medieval Castilian and closer to modern Spanish than any other language, is spoken by many descendants of the Sephardic Jews who were expelled from Spain in the 15th century. In many ways it is not a separate language but a dialect of Castilian. Ladino is absent of native American vocabulary which was influential during colonial times. It does comprise of other vocabulary from Turkish, Hebrew and from other languages spoken wherever the Sephardic Jews settled.
History
The Spanish language developed from vulgar Latin, with influence from Celtiberian, Basque and Arabic, in the north of the Iberian Peninsula (see Iberian Romance languages). Typical features of Spanish diachronical phonology include lenition (Latin vita, Spanish vida), palatalization (Latin annum, Spanish año) and diphthongation (stem-changing) of short e and o from Vulgar Latin (Latin terra, Spanish tierra; Latin novus, Spanish nuevo). Similar phenomena can be found in most other Romance languages as well.
During the Reconquista, this northern dialect was carried south, and indeed is still a minority language in northern Morocco.
The first Latin to Spanish dictionary (Gramática de la Lengua Castellana) was written in Salamanca, Spain, in 1492 by Elio Antonio de Nebrija. When Isabella of Castile was presented with the book, she asked, What do I want a work like this for, if I already know the language?, to which he replied, Ma'am, the language is the instrument of the Empire.
From the 16th century onwards, the language was brought to the Americas, Federated States of Micronesia, Guam, Marianas, Palau, and the Philippines by Spanish colonization. Also in this epoch, Spanish became the main language of Politics and Art across the major part of Europe. In the 18th century, French took its place.
In the 20th century, Spanish was introduced in Equatorial Guinea and Western Sahara and parts of the United States, such as Spanish Harlem in New York City, that had not been part of the Spanish Empire.
For details on borrowed words and other external influences in Spanish, see Influences on the Spanish language. see also Linguistic history of Spanish
Geographic distribution
| Spanish language |
|---|
| Names for the language History Pronunciation Dialects Writing system Grammar: |
Spanish is one of the official languages of the Organization of American States, the United Nations and the European Union. The majority of its speakers are located in the Western Hemisphere, and Spain.
With approximately 106 million first-language and second-language speakers, Mexico boasts the largest population of Spanish-speakers in the world. The four next largest populations reside in Spain, Colombia, Argentina and the United States of America (U.S. residents age 5 and older who speak Spanish at home number 31 million) [3].
Spanish is the official language in 22 countries: Argentina, Bolivia (co-official Quechua and Aymara), Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Equatorial Guinea (co-official French), Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay (co-official Guaraní), Peru (co-official Quechua and Aymara), Puerto Rico (co-official English), Spain (co-official in some regions with Catalan, Galician and Basque), Uruguay, Venezuela, and Western Sahara (co-official Arabic).
In Belize, Spanish holds no official recognition. However, it is the native tongue of about 50% of the population, and is spoken as a second language by another 20%. It is arguably the most important and widely-spoken on a popular level, but English remains the sole official language. In Haiti, it is spoken by a sizeable portion of the population, especially those who live close to the border with the Spanish-speaking Dominican Republic. The Télévision Nationale d'Haïti, the country's national television network and the Agence Haïtienne de Presse also have occasional television and radio broadcasts in Spanish, however only French and Haitian Creole are the only two officially recognized languages in that nation.[1]
In the United States, Spanish is spoken by three-quarters of its 41.3 million Hispanic population. The continuous arrival of new immigrants enables it to resist the assimilation experienced by the languages of most previous immigrants. It is also being learned and spoken by a small, though slowly growing, proportion of its non-Hispanic population for its increasing use in business, commerce, and both domestic and international politics. Spanish holds co-official status in the unincorporated U.S. territory of Puerto Rico. See Spanish in the United States for further information.
In Brazil, Spanish has obtained an important status as a second language among young students and many skilled professionals. In recent years, with Brazil decreasing its reliance on trade with the USA and Europe and increasing trade and ties with its Spanish-speaking neighbors (especially as a member of the Mercosur trading bloc), much stress has been placed on bilingualism and Spanish proficiency in the country. On July 07, 2005, the National Congress of Brazil gave final approval to a bill that makes Spanish a mandatory foreign language in the country’s public and private primary schools [2]. The close genetic relationship between the two languages, along with the fact that Spanish is the dominant and official language of almost every country that borders Brazil, adds to the popularity. Standard Spanish and Ladino may also be spoken natively by some Spanish-descended Brazilians, immigrant workers from neighbouring Spanish-speaking countries and Brazilian Sephardim respectively, who have maintained it as their home language. Additionally, in Brazil's border states that have authority over their educational systems, Spanish has been taught for years. In many other border towns and villages (especially along the Uruguayan-Brazilian border) a mixed language commonly known as Portuñol is also spoken.
In European countries other than Spain, it may be spoken by some of their Spanish-speaking immigrant communities, primarily in Andorra (where it is spoken by a great part of the population, despite having no official status), the Netherlands, Italy, France, Germany and the United Kingdom where there is a strong community in London. There has been a sharp increase in the popularity of Spanish in the United Kingdom over the last few years. It is spoken by much of the population of Gibraltar, though English remains the only official language. Yanito (llanito), an English-Spanish (Spanglish) mixed language is also spoken.
Among the countries and territories in Oceania, Spanish is the seventh most spoken language in Australia(100,000 speakers); where there is an older Argentine, Chilean and Spanish community and growing Colombian and Mexican communities mainly in Sydney. It is also spoken by the approximately 3,000 inhabitants of Easter Island, a territorial possession of Chile. The island nations of Guam, Palau, Northern Marianas, Marshall Islands and Federated States of Micronesia all once had Spanish speakers, but Spanish has long since been forgotten. It now only exists as an influence on the local native languages and spoken by its foreign populations.
In Asia, the Spanish language has long been in decline. Spanish ceased to be an official language of the Philippines in 1987, and it is now spoken by less than 0.01% of the population, or 2,658 people (1990 Census), though recently there seems to have been a resurgence in interest in the language among the educated youth. The sole existing Spanish-Asiatic creole language, Chabacano, is spoken by an additional 0.4% of the Filipino population: 292,630 (1990 census). Most other Philippine languages contain generous quantities of Spanish loan words. Among other Asian countries, Spanish may also be spoken by pockets of ex-immigrant communities, such as Mexican-born ethnic Chinese deported to China or third and fourth generation ethnic Japanese Peruvians returning to their ancestral homeland of Japan.
In the Middle East and North Africa, small Spanish-speaking communities exist in Israel (both standard Spanish and Ladino), northern Morocco (both standard Spanish and Ladino), Turkey (Ladino), and the Spanish enclaves of Ceuta and Melilla which are part of Spain.
In North America and the Caribbean, Spanish is also spoken by segments of the populations in Aruba, Canada (mainly in Toronto and Montreal), Netherlands Antilles (mainly on Bonaire, Curaçao and St. Maarten), Trinidad and Tobago, and the U.S. Virgin Islands (mainly on St. Croix).
In Antarctica, the territorial claims and permanent bases made by Argentina, Chile, Peru, Uruguay and Spain also place Spanish as the official and working language of these enclaves.
| Alphabetic Order | Number of Speakers |
|---|---|
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Variations
There are important variations among the regions of Spain and throughout Spanish-speaking America. In Spain the Castilian dialect pronunciation is commonly taken as the national standard (although the characteristic weak pronouns usage or laísmo of this dialect is deprecated).
Spanish has three second-person singular pronouns: tú, usted, and in some parts of Latin America, vos (the use of this form is called voseo). Generally speaking, tú and vos are informal and used with friends (though in Spain vos is considered an archaic form for address of exalted personages, its use now mainly confined to the liturgy). Usted is universally regarded as the formal form (derived from vuestra merced, "your mercy") , and is used as a mark of respect, as when addressing one's elders or strangers. The pronoun vosotros is the plural form of tú in most of Spain, although in the Americas (and certain southern Spanish cities such as Cádiz, and in the Canary Islands) it is replaced with ustedes. It is remarkable that the use of ustedes for the informal plural "you" in southern Spain does not follow the usual rule for pronoun-verb agreement; e.g., while the formal form for "you go", ustedes van, uses the third-person plural form of the verb, in Cádiz the informal form is constructed as ustedes vais, using the second-person plural of the verb. In the Canary Islands, though, the usual pronoun-verb agreement is preserved in most cases.
Vos (see voseo) is used extensively as the primary spoken form of the second-person singular pronoun in many countries of Latin America, including Argentina, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Paraguay, Uruguay, the Antioquia state of Colombia and the State of Zulia in Venezuela. In Argentina, Uruguay, and increasingly in Paraguay, it is also the standard form used in the media, but media in other voseante countries continue to use usted or tú. Vos may also be used regionally in other countries. Depending on country or region, usage may be considered standard or (by better educated speakers) to be unrefined. Interpersonal situations in which the use of vos is acceptable may also differ considerably between regions.
Spanish forms also differ regarding second-person plural pronouns. The Spanish dialects of Latin America have only one form of the second-person plural, ustedes (formal or familiar, as the case may be). In Spain there are two forms — ustedes (formal) and vosotros (familiar).
The Real Academia Española (Royal Spanish Academy), like academies formed for twenty-one other national languages, exercises a standardizing influence through its publication of dictionaries and widely respected grammar and style guides. Due to this influence and for other sociohistorical reasons, a neutral standardized form of the language (Standard Spanish) is widely acknowledged for use in literature, academic contexts and the media.
Some words are different, even embarrassingly so, in different Hispanophone countries. Most Spanish speakers can recognize other Spanish forms, even in places where they are not commonly used, but Spaniards generally do not recognise specifically American usages. For example, Spanish mantequilla, aguacate and albaricoque (respectively, "butter", "avocado", "apricot") correspond to manteca, palta, and damasco, respectively, in Argentina and Chile. The everyday Spanish words coger (to catch, get, or pick up) and concha (seashell) are considered extremely rude in parts of Latin America. The first meaning "to have sex" and the latter "vagina". The Puerto Rican word for "bobby pin" (pinche) is an obscenity in Mexico.
Grammar
Spanish is a relatively inflected language, with a two-gender system and about fifty conjugated forms per verb, but small noun declension and limited pronominal declension. (For a detailed overview of verbs, see Spanish verbs and Spanish irregular verbs.)
Spanish syntax is generally Subject Verb Object, though variations are common. Spanish is right-branching, uses prepositions, and usually places adjectives after nouns.
Spanish is also pro-drop (allows the deletion of pronouns when pragmatically unnecessary) and verb-framed.
Sounds
The phonemic inventory listed below is not an accurate description of the current Standard Spanish because it includes historical phonemes that have been merged with others or dropped in the process of the language evolution, as noted further below.
| Bilabial | Labio- Dental |
Dental | Alveolar | Post- Alveolar |
Palatal | Velar | Glottal | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nasals | m | n | ɲ | (ŋ) | ||||||||||||
| Plosives | p | b | t | d | k | g | ||||||||||
| Fricatives | f | θ* | (ð) | s | (z) | ʝ | x | (h) | ||||||||
| Affricates | tʃ | |||||||||||||||
| Approximants | (β̞) | (ɰ) | ||||||||||||||
| Trills | r | |||||||||||||||
| Taps | ɾ | |||||||||||||||
| Laterals | l | ʎ* | ||||||||||||||
Notes: When sounds appear in pairs, the left is unvoiced, the right is voiced. Also, allophones have been denoted in parentheses (). An asterisk (*) marks sounds that appear in some dialects but not others.
The consonantal system of Castilian Spanish, by the 16th century, underwent the following important changes that differentiated it from some nearby Romance languages, such as Portuguese and Catalan:
- The initial /f/, that had evolved into a vacillating /h/, was lost in most words (although this etymological h- has been preserved in spelling).
- The voiced labiodental fricative /v/ (that was written u or v) merged with the bilabial oclusive /b/ (written b). Orthographically, b and v do not correspond to different phonemes in contemporary Spanish, excepting some areas in Spain, particularly the ones influenced by Catalan/Valencian.
- The voiced alveolar fricative /z/ (that was written s between vowels) merged with the voiceless /s/ (that was written s, or ss between vowels).
- The voiced alveolar affricate /dz/ (that was written z) merged with the voiceless /ts/ (that was written ç, ce, ci), and then /ts/ evolved into the interdental /θ/, now written z, ce, ci. But in Andalucia, the Canary Islands and the Americas these sounds merged with /s/ as well. Notice that the ç or c with cedilla was in its origin a Spanish letter, although is no longer used.
- The voiced postalveolar fricative /ʒ/ (that was written j, ge, gi) merged with the voiceless /ʃ/ (that was written x, as in Quixote), and then /ʃ/ evolved by the 17th century into the modern velar sound /x/, now written j, ge, gi. However, in Argentina, y and ll are pronounced /ʒ/ in most cases.
The consonantal system of Medieval Spanish has been better preserved in Ladino and in Portuguese, neither of which underwent the shift.
Lexical stress
Spanish has a phonemic stress system — the place where stress will fall cannot be predicted by other features of the word, and two words can differ by just a change in stress. For example, the word camino (with penultimate stress) means "road" or "I walk" whereas caminó (with final stress) means "you (formal)/he/she/it walked". Also, since Spanish syllables are all pronounced at a more or less constant tempo, the language is said to be syllable-timed.
In a written word, the stressed syllable can always be identified (see Writing system of Spanish for details). An amusing example of the significance of stress (and intonation) is a puzzle which requires the subject to punctuate: como como como como como como so that it makes sense. The answer is ¿Cómo, cómo como? ¡Como como como! (What do you mean / how / do I eat? / I eat / the way / I eat!).
Writing system
The pronunciation of almost any Spanish word can be perfectly predicted from its written form.
Spanish is written using the Latin alphabet, with the addition of ñ (eñe). Historically ch (che, pronounced [tʃ]), ll [eʝe], and "rr", were until 1994 defined as single letters, with their own names and places in the alphabet (a, b, c, ch, d, …, l, ll, m, n, ñ,… ,q,r,rr,s,t …,). Since 1994 these letters have been abolished, and replaced with the appropriate letter pair. This effectively means that spelling is visibly unchanged, but words with "ch" are now alphabetically sorted between "ce" and "ci", instead of following "cz", and similarly for "ll" and "rr". However, "che", "elle" and "erre" are still used in coloquial spanish to mean "ch" "ll" and "rr" respectively.
The letter u sometimes carries diaeresis (ü) after the letter g, and stressed vowels carry acute accents (á) in many words. These marks usually indicate deviations from what would be expected if one followed the customary rules of Spanish orthography. For example, gue indicates that the u is not pronounced. However, güe means that the u is also pronounced (in this case, with the w sound.) Accent marks usually indicate that the customary rules of accentuation (stress the last syllable of any word ending in a consonant (including y) other than n or s; stress the next to last syllable otherwise) are to be ignored. In a few cases, an accented letter is used to distinguish meaning: compare el (= the before a masculine singular noun) with él (= he or it). Words that could otherwise be mistaken for function words (often pronounced as enclitics, i.e. without their own stress) are often given accents (such as "té", tea, or "dé" and "sé", forms of "dar" and either "saber" or "ser", respectively). Interrogative pronouns (que, cual, donde, quien, etc.) receive accents when in questions or indirect questions. Demonstrative pronouns (ese, este, aquel, etc.) have accents when they refer to a specific, implied object and are not being used as adjectives. In addition, o (= or) is written with an accent between numerals to indicate that it is not part of the numerals: e.g., 10 ó 20 should be read as diez o veinte rather than diez mil veinte (= 10,020). Accent marks are frequently omitted on capital letters, but should not be.
Interrogative and exclamatory clauses begin with inverted question ( ¿ ) and exclamation marks ( ¡ ).
Examples of Spanish
Note, the third column uses the International Phonetic Alphabet, the standard for linguists, to transcribe the sounds. There are several examples of travellers' vocabulary and one literary reference.
You can listen to these words being read out. Both the transcription and the recording represent standard Castilian pronunciation.
| English | Spanish | IPA transcription (Standard Spanish) |
IPA Transcription (Common Variants) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spanish | español | [es.pa.ˈɲol] | |
| Spanish (Castilian) | castellano | [kas.teˈja.no] | [kas.teˈʒa.no] |
| English | inglés | [iŋˈgles] | |
| Yes | Sí | [ˈsi] | |
| No | No | [ˈno] | |
| Hello | Hola | [ˈo.la] | |
| How are you? (informal) | ¿Cómo estás? | [ˈko.mo esˈtas] | |
| Good morning! | Buenos días | [ˈbwe.nos ˈdi.as] | |
| Good afternoon/evening! | Buenas tardes | [bwe.nas 'tar.des] | |
| Good night! | Buenas noches | [ˈbwe.nas ˈno.tʃes] | [ˈbwe.nas ˈno.ʃes] |
| Goodbye | Adiós | [aˈðjos] | |
| Please | Por favor | [ˈpor faˈβ̞or] | |
| Thank you | Gracias | [ˈgra.θjas]1 or [ˈgra.sjas] | |
| Excuse me | Perdón | [pεrˈðon] | |
| I'm Sorry | Lo siento | [ˈlo ˈsjen.to] | |
| Hurry! (fam.) | ¡Date prisa! | [ˈda.te ˈpri.sa] | |
| Because | Porque | [ˈpor ˌke] | |
| Why? | ¿Por qué? | [ˌpor ˈke] | |
| Who? | ¿Quién? | [ˈkjen] | |
| What? | ¿Qué? | [ˈke] | |
| When? | ¿Cuándo? | [ˈkwan.do] | |
| Where? | ¿Dónde? | [ˈdon.de] | |
| How? | ¿Cómo? | [ˈko.mo] | |
| How much? | ¿Cuánto? | [ˈkwan.to] | |
| I do not understand | No entiendo | [no enˈtjen.do] | |
| Help me (please) Help me! |
Ayúdeme ¡Ayúdame! |
[aˈju.ðe.me] [aˈju.ða.me] |
[aˈdʒu.ðe.me] [aˈdʒu.ða.me] |
| Where's the bathroom? | ¿Dónde está el baño? | [ˈdon.de eˈsta el ˈba.ɲo] | |
| Do you speak English? (informal) | ¿Hablas inglés? | [ˈaβ̞.las iŋˈgles] | |
| Cheers! (toast) | ¡Salud! | [saˈluð] | |
| 1 Standard pronunciation in Spain. | |||
Examples of English with Spanish Transcription and Pronunciation
| English: |
In a village of La Mancha, the name of which I have no desire to recall, there lived not long since one of those gentlemen that keep a lance in the lance-rack, an old shield, a lean horse and a greyhound for racing. |
|---|---|
| Spanish: |
En un lugar de la Mancha, de cuyo nombre no quiero acordarme, no ha mucho tiempo que vivía un hidalgo de los de lanza en astillero, adarga antigua, rocín flaco y galgo corredor. |
| IPA transcription (Standard Spanish): |
[en un luˈɣar | ðe la ˈman.tʃa ‖ de ˈkuʝo | ˈnom.bre | no ˈkje.ro | a.korˈðar.me ‖ no a ˈmu.tʃo | ˈtjem.po | ke β̞iˈβ̞i.a | un iˈðal.ɣo ðe los ‖ ðe ˈlan.sa | en a.stiˈʝe.ro ‖ aˈðar.ɣa | anˈti.ɣwa ‖ ro.ˈsin | ˈfla.ko | i ˈgal.ɣo | ko.reˈðor ‖] |
| IPA transcription (Northern/Central Spain): |
[en un luˈɣar | ðe la ˈman.tʃa ‖ de ˈkuʝo | ˈnom.bre | no ˈkje.ro | a.korˈðar.me ‖ no a ˈmu.tʃo | ˈtjem.po | ke β̞iˈβ̞i.a | un iˈðal.ɣo ðe los ‖ ðe ˈlan.θa | en a.stiˈʎe.ro ‖ aˈðar.ɣa | anˈti.ɣwa ‖ ro.ˈθin | ˈfla.ko | i ˈgal.ɣo | ko.reˈðor ‖] |
| IPA transcription (Rioplatense (porteño) Spanish): |
[en un luˈɣar | ðe la ˈman.tʃa ‖ de ˈkuʃo | ˈnom.bre | no ˈkje.ro | a.korˈðar.me ‖ no a ˈmu.tʃo | ˈtjem.po | ke β̞iˈβ̞i.a | un iˈðal.ɣo ðe loh ‖ ðe ˈlan.sa | en a.htiˈʃe.ro ‖ aˈðar.ɣa | anˈti.ɣwa ‖ ro.ˈsin | ˈfla.ko | i ˈgal.ɣo | ko.reˈðor ‖] |
| IPA transcription (Caribbean Spanish): |
[ê ûŋ luˈɣal | ðe la ˈmâŋ.tʃa ‖ de ˈkuʝo | ˈnôŋ.bre | no ˈkje.ro | a.kolˈðal.me ‖ no a ˈmu.tʃo | ˈtjêm.po | ke ̞iˈβ̞i.a | ûŋ iˈðal.ɣo ðe loh ‖ ðe ˈlâŋ.sa | êŋ a.htiˈʝe.ro ‖ aˈðal.ɣa | âŋˈti.ɣwa ‖ ro.ˈsîŋ | ˈfla.ko | i ˈgal.ɣo | ko.reˈðol ‖] |
El Ingenioso Hidalgo Don Quixote de la Mancha, Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra (opening sentence).
See also
- Romance languages
- Real Academia Española
- Common phrases in Spanish
- Hispanophone
- List of English words of Spanish origin
- Names given to the Spanish language
- Spanish proverbs
- Spanish language poets
- Spanish-based creole languages
- Spanish profanity
- Portuñol
- Papiamento, Chavacano language, Spanglish, Yanito, Palenquero
- Rock en español
- Latin Union
- Isleños
- Spanish Empire
- Swadesh list of Spanish words
- Frespañol
- Spanglish
Local varieties
References
- ^ Fuentes y criterios demográficos. Centro virtual Cervantes.
- ^ Nearly 1-in-5 Speak a Foreign Language at Home. US census bureau.
- ^ American Community Survey. US census bureau.
External links
About the Spanish language
- Spanish at About.com
- (Spanish) Official page of the RAE
- Ethnologue report for Spanish
- A history of the Spanish language (sample, PDF)
- English Spanish Translator Org Spanish language forums.
- Spanish evolution from Latin
Dictionaries
- Yahoo Spanish-English Dictionary
- Dictionary of the RAE (Spanish-Spanish)
- Word Reference (Spanish-English)
- AskPaco (Spanish-English/English-Spanish)
Tutorials
- Spanish grammar Wikibook
- Spanish phrasebook on WikiTravel
- Image:Spanish Student Cheatsheet.pdf on Wikimedia Commons (PDF)
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