hola, i'm jordan and this is a spanish quickie--fast,easy spanish lessons from somebody who speaks your language. today, we’re going back to pronunciation.if you’re having any problems with pronunciation, make sure you check out the first video idid called spanish pronunciation. in this real quick video, we’re going tofocus in on the special sounds that are specific
How To Address A Letter In Spanish, to spain or espaã±a! if you’ve ever been to spain or spoken tosomebody from spain, you’ve probably noticed right away, they speak with a lisp. no seriously,the correct way to speak spanish in spain is basically with a lisp.
in spain, lots of letters make the thhhh soundlike with a th. first, there’s c. in spanish, c can makea kuh sound like in rico. but it can also make a c sound like in vecino. but in spain,in that second case, in vecino, the c makes a th sound...so it would be vecino. rico means rich for the record. and vecinois neighbor. same thing goes for the z. in latin america,the z makes the s sound, like an s. but in spain, just like the c, it makes the th sound.so zapato in mexico would be zapato in spain. okay, i can accept that. but what hit me asreally crazy is the d also follows this pattern. it’s a little softer, but depending on theperson, not really. so la mitad in mexico
would be la mitad in spain. i remember when i first started learning spanish(in holland, living with a bunch of spanish people), i was having a hard time doing theiraccent. so i really had to focus, and remember it every time--it hadn’t become involuntaryyet. one day during that period when i was struggling,i went up to my buddy ramon and said something that started with this word. so i went upto him and said “nethethito...†i messed up. the s is always supposed to sound likean s, so he jokingly asked “oh nethethitaths???†now, unless you’re learning spanish specificallyto use in spain, i would suggest just going with the normal, latin american sounds. it’smuch more common and quite frankly, much easier.
not that the spanish way is hard, it’s just,like in necesito, it’s harder because you have to make one sound then switch to makethe other. whereas in mexico it would be necesito--much easier i think. that’s it. don’t forget, there’s alsoa difference between spain and latin america when it comes to personal pronouns. if that’snews to you, then you need to watch the video called personal pronouns. for everybody else, no homework today. i justwanted you to be aware of this situation. as i point out movies and music in the future,lots of them will feature these sounds from spain. cause quite frankly, i love spain.
if you liked this video, why don’t you hitthe like button or the little thumbs up, and if you haven’t subscribed to the gringoespaã±ol newsletter, be sure to do that now. you can’t rely on facebook to tell you ofmy new videos--sign up and you’ll get an email once or twice a week with links to anynew videos and extras i posted. the link is below this video or directly to gringoespanol.com. adiã³s. hasta luego.
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