Spanish language
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Spanish, Castilian Español, Castellano |
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Pronunciation: | /espaˈɲol/, /kasteˈʎano/ or /kasteˈʝano/ | |
Spoken in: | Spanish speaking countries: Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Equatorial Guinea, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Puerto Rico, Spain, Uruguay, Venezuela, and a significant numbers of the populations of Andorra, Belize, Gibraltar, and the United States. |
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Total speakers: | First languagea: 322[1]– c. 400 million[2][3][4] Totala: 400–500 million[5][6][7] aAll numbers are approximate. |
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Ranking: | 2 (native speakers)[8][9][10][11] 3 (total speakers) |
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Language family: | Indo-European Italic Romance Italo-Western Gallo-Iberian Ibero-Romance West Iberian Spanish, Castilian |
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Writing system: | Latin (Spanish variant) | |
Official status | ||
Official language in: | 21 countries | |
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 639-3: | spa | |
Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. |
Spanish (español ) or Castilian (castellano) is a Romance language that originated in northern Spain, and gradually spread in the Kingdom of Castile and evolved into the principal language of government and trade. It was taken to Africa, the Americas, and Asia Pacific when the Spanish Empire was established between the 15th and 19th centuries.
Today, between 322 and 400 million people natively speak Spanish,[12][6] making it the world's second most-spoken language by native speakers (after Mandarin Chinese).[13][14]
Contents |
[edit] Hispanosphere
- See also: Spanish Empire
Spanish identified as the sole Official language Spanish identified as a Co-Official language | ||||
The Countries of the Hispanic-influenced World |
It is estimated that the combined total of native and non-native Spanish speakers is approximately 500 million, likely making it the third most spoken language by total number of speakers (after English and Chinese).[12][6]
Today, Spanish is an official language of Spain, most Latin American countries, and Equatorial Guinea; 21 nations speak it as their primary language. Spanish also is one of six official languages of the United Nations. Mexico has the world's largest Spanish-speaking population, and Spanish is the second most-widely spoken language in the United States [15] and the most popular studied foreign language in U.S. schools and universities.[16][17] Global internet usage statistics for 2007 show Spanish as the third most commonly used language on the internet, after English and Chinese.[18]Spanish has been described as the third most influential language in the world (after English and French)[19]
[edit] Naming,origin
Spaniards tend to call this language español (Spanish) when contrasting it with languages of other states, such as French and English, but call it castellano (Castilian), that is, the language of the Castile region, when contrasting it with other languages spoken in Spain such as Galician (gallego; native name: galego), Basque (euskara) and Catalan (catalán; native name: català) (known as Valencian in the Valencian Community). This reasoning also holds true for the language's preferred name in some Hispanic American countries. In this manner, the Spanish Constitution of 1978 uses the term castellano to define the official language of the whole Spanish State, as 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 their respective Autonomous Communities… |
” |
The name castellano is, however, widely used for the language as a whole in Latin America. Some Spanish speakers consider castellano a generic term with no political or ideological links, much as "Spanish" is in English. Often Latin Americans use it to differentiate their own variety of Spanish as opposed to the variety of Spanish spoken in Spain, or variety of Spanish which is considered as standard in the region.[citation needed]
[edit] Classification and related languages
Spanish is closely related to the other West Iberian Romance languages: Asturian (asturianu), Galician (galego), Ladino (dzhudezmo/spanyol/kasteyano), and Portuguese (português). Catalan, an East Iberian language which exhibits many Gallo-Romance traits, is more similar to the neighbouring Occitan language (occitan) than to Spanish, or indeed than Spanish and Portuguese are to each other.
Spanish and Portuguese share similar grammars and a majority of vocabulary as well as a common history of Arabic influence while a great part of the peninsula was under Islamic rule (both languages expanded over Islamic territories). Their lexical similarity has been estimated as 89%.[8] See Differences between Spanish and Portuguese for further information.
[edit] Ladino
- Further information: Ladino language
Ladino, which is essentially medieval Spanish and closer to modern Spanish than any other language, is spoken by many descendants of the Sephardi Jews who were expelled from Spain in the 15th century. Ladino speakers are currently almost exclusively Sephardi Jews, with family roots in Turkey, Greece or the Balkans: current speakers mostly live in Israel and Turkey, with a few pockets in Latin America. In many ways it is not a separate language but a parallel dialect of Castilian. It lacks the Native American vocabulary which was influential during the Spanish colonial period, and it retains many archaic features which have since been lost in standard Spanish. It contains, however, other vocabulary which is not found in standard Castilian, including vocabulary from Hebrew, some French, Greek and Turkish, and other languages spoken where the Sephardim settled.
Ladino is in serious danger of extinction because many native speakers today are elderly as well as elderly olim (immigrants to Israel) who have not transmitted the language to their children or grandchildren. However, it is experiencing a minor revival among Sephardi communities, especially in music. In the case of the Latin American communities, the danger of extinction is also due to the risk of assimilation by modern Castilian.
A related dialect is Haketia, the Judaeo-Spanish of northern Morocco. This too tended to assimilate with modern Spanish, during the Spanish occupation of the region.
[edit] Vocabulary comparison
Spanish and Italian share a very similar phonological system and do not differ very much in grammar. At present, the lexical similarity with Italian is estimated at 82%.[8] As a result, Spanish and Italian are mutually intelligible to various degrees. The lexical similarity with Portuguese is even greater, 89%, but the vagaries of Portuguese pronunciation make it less easily understood by Hispanophones than Italian. Mutual intelligibility between Spanish and French or Romanian is even lower (lexical similarity being respectively 75% and 71%[8]): comprehension of Spanish by French speakers who have not studied the language is as low as an estimated 45% - the same as of English. The common features of the writing systems of the Romance languages allow for a greater amount of interlingual reading comprehension than oral communication would.
Latin | Spanish | Galician | Portuguese | Catalan | Italian | French | Romanian | English |
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nos | nosotros | nós/nosoutros | nós¹ | nosaltres | noi² | nous³ | noi | we |
fratrem germānum (acc.) (lit. "true brother", i.e. not a cousin) | hermano | irmán | irmão | germà | fratello | frère | frate | brother |
dies Martis (Classical) tertia feria |
martes | martes | terça-feira | dimarts | martedì | mardi | marți | Tuesday |
cantiō (nem, acc.), canticum | canción | canción | canção | cançó | canzone | chanson | cântec | song |
magis or plus | más (archaically also plus) |
máis | mais (archaically also chus) |
més (archaically also pus) |
più | plus | mai | more |
manum sinistram (acc.) | mano izquierda
also (mano siniestra) |
man esquerda | mão esquerda (archaically also sẽestra) |
mà esquerra | mano sinistra | main gauche | mâna stângă | left hand |
nihil or nullam rem natam (acc.) (lit. "no thing born") |
nada | nada/ren | nada (archaically also rem) |
res | niente/nulla | rien/nul | nimic | nothing |
1. also nós outros in early modern Portuguese (e.g. The Lusiads)
2. noi altri in Southern Italian dialects and languages
3. Alternatively nous autres
[edit] History
Spanish evolved from Vulgar Latin, with minor influences from Arabic during the Andalusian period and from Basque and Celtiberian, and some Germanic languages via the Visigoths. Spanish developed along the remote cross road strips among the Alava, Cantabria, Burgos, Soria and La Rioja provinces of Northern Spain, as a strongly innovative and differing variant from its nearest cousin, Leonese speech, with a higher degree of Basque influence in these regions (see Iberian Romance languages). Typical features of Spanish diachronical phonology include lenition (Latin vita, Spanish vida), palatalization (Latin annum, Spanish año, and Latin anellum, Spanish anillo) 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 other Romance languages as well.
During the Reconquista, this northern dialect from Cantabria was carried south, and remains a minority language in the northern coastal Morocco.
The first Latin-to-Spanish grammar (Gramática de la Lengua Castellana) was written in Salamanca, Spain, in 1492, by Elio Antonio de Nebrija. When it was presented to Isabel de Castilla, she asked, "What do I want a work like this for, if I already know the language?", to which he replied, "Your highness, the language is the instrument of the Empire."[citation needed]
From the 16th century onwards, the language was taken to the Americas and the Spanish East Indies via Spanish colonization, and in that epoch, Spanish became the principal language of politics and Art in most of Europe[citation needed]; French replaced it in the 18th century.
In the 20th century, Spanish was introduced to Equatorial Guinea and the Western Sahara, the United States, such as in Spanish Harlem, in New York City, that had not been part of the Spanish Empire. For details on borrowed words and other external influences upon Spanish, see Influences on the Spanish language.
[edit] Characterization
A defining characteristic of Spanish was the diphthongization of the Latin short vowels e and o into ie and ue, respectively, when they were stressed. Similar sound changes are found in other Romance languages, but in Spanish they were significant. Some examples:
- Lat. petra > Sp. piedra, It. pietra, Fr. pierre, Port./Gal. pedra "stone".
- Lat. moritur > Sp. muere, It. muore, Fr. meurt / muert, Rom. moare, Port./Gal. morre "die".
Peculiar to early Spanish (as in the Gascon dialect of Occitan, and possibly due to a Basque substratum) was the mutation of Latin initial f- into h- whenever it was followed by a vowel that did not diphthongate. Compare for instance:
- Lat. filium > It. figlio, Port. filho, Gal. fillo, Fr. fils, Occitan filh (but Gascon hilh) Sp. hijo (but Ladino fijo);
- late Lat. *fabulare > Lad. favlar, Port./Gal. falar, Sp. hablar;
- but Lat. focum > It. fuoco, Port./Gal. fogo, Sp./Lad. fuego.
Some consonant clusters of Latin also produced characteristically different results in these languages, for example:
- Lat. clamare, acc. flammam, plenum > Lad. lyamar, flama, pleno; Sp. llamar, llama, lleno. However, in Spanish there are also the forms clamar, flama, pleno; Port. chamar, chama, cheio; Gal. chamar, chama, cheo.
- Lat. acc. octo, noctem, multum > Lad. ocho, noche, muncho; Sp. ocho, noche, mucho; Port. oito, noite, muito; Gal. oito, noite, moito.
[edit] Geographic distribution
Spanish language |
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Names for the language History Pronunciation Dialects Orthography Grammar: |
Spanish is one of the official languages of the European Union, the Organization of American States, the Organization of Ibero-American States, the United Nations, and the Union of South American Nations.
[edit] Europe
Spanish is an official language of Spain, the country for which it is named and from which it originated. It is also spoken in Gibraltar, though English is the official language.[20] Likewise, it is spoken in Andorra though Catalan is the official language.[21][22] It is also spoken by small communities in other European countries, such as the United Kingdom, France, and Germany.[23] Spanish is an official language of the European Union. In Switzerland, Spanish is the mother tongue of 1.7% of the population, representing the first minority after the 4 official languages of the country.[24]
[edit] The Americas
[edit] Latin America
Most Spanish speakers are in Latin America; of most countries with the most Spanish speakers, only Spain is outside of the Americas. Mexico has most of the world's native speakers. Nationally, Spanish is the official language of Argentina, Bolivia (co-official Quechua and Aymara), Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico , Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay (co-official Guaraní[25]), Peru (co-official Quechua and, in some regions, Aymara), Uruguay, and Venezuela. Spanish is also the official language (co-official language English) in the U.S. commonwealth of Puerto Rico.[26]
Spanish has no official recognition in the former British colony of Belize; however, per the 2000 census, it is spoken by 43% of the population. [27][28] Mainly, it is spoken by Hispanic descendants who remained in the region since the 17th century; however, English is the official language.[29]
Spain colonized Trinidad and Tobago first in 1498, leaving the Carib people the Spanish language. Also the Cocoa Panyols, laborers from Venezuela, took their culture and language with them; they are accredited with the music of "Parang" ("Parranda") on the island. Because of Trinidad's location on the South American coast, the country is much influenced by its Spanish-speaking neighbors. A recent census shows that more than 1,500 inhabitants speak Spanish.[citation needed] In 2004, the government launched the Spanish as a First Foreign Language (SAFFL) initiative in March 2005.[30] Government regulations require Spanish to be taught, beginning in primary school, while thirty percent of public employees are to be linguistically competent within five years.[citation needed] The government also announced that Spanish will be the country's second official language by 2020, beside English.[citation needed]
Spanish is important in Brazil because of its proximity to and increased trade with its Spanish-speaking neighbors; for example, as a member of the Mercosur trading bloc.[31] In 2005, the National Congress of Brazil approved a bill, signed into law by the President, making Spanish available as a foreign language in secondary schools.[32] In many border towns and villages (especially on the Uruguayan-Brazilian border), a mixed language known as Portuñol is spoken.[33]
In Jamaica, English is the official language; however, Spanish is recognized along the western coast, where the country's neighbors reside, who are the Cubans, Costa Ricans, Panamanians and other people from Central America and Spain.[citation needed]
[edit] United States
In the 2006 census, 44.3 million people of the U.S. population were Hispanic or Latino by origin;[34] 34 million people, 12.2 percent, of the population older than 5 years speak Spanish at home.[35]Spanish has a long history in the United States (many south-western states were part of Mexico and Spain), and it recently has been revitalized by much immigration from Latin America. Spanish is the most widely taught foreign language in the country. [36] Although the United States has no formally designated "official languages," Spanish is formally recognized at the state level beside English; in the U.S. state of New Mexico, 30 per cent of the population speak it. It also has strong influence in metropolitan areas such as Chicago and New York City. Spanish is the dominant spoken language in Puerto Rico, a U.S. territory. In total, the U.S. has the world's fifth-largest Spanish-speaking population.[37]
[edit] Philippines
Spanish was an official language of the Philippines but was never spoken by a majority of the population. Movements for most of the masses to learn the language were started but were stopped by the friars. Its importance fell in the first half of the 20th century following the U.S. occupation and administration of the islands. The introduction of the English language in the Philippine government system put an end to the use of Spanish as the official language. The language lost its official status in 1973 during the Ferdinand Marcos administration.[38]
Spanish is spoken mainly by small communities of Filipino-born Spaniards, Latin Americans, and Filipino mestizos (mixed race), descendants of the early colonial Spanish settlers. Throughout the 20th century, the Spanish language has declined in importance compared to English and Tagalog. According to the 1990 Philippine census, there were 2,658 native speakers of Spanish.[39] No figures were provided during the 1995 and 2000 censuses; however, figures for 2000 did specify there were over 600,000 native speakers of Chavacano, a Spanish based creole language spoken in Cavite and Zamboanga. Some other sources put the number of Spanish speakers in the Philippines around two to three million; however, these sources are disputed. In Tagalog, there are 4,000 Spanish words and around 6,000 Spanish words in Visayan and other Philippine languages as well. [40] Today Spanish is offered as a foreign language in Philippines schools and universities.
[edit] Africa
In Africa, Spanish is official in the UN-recognised but Moroccan-occupied Western Sahara[citation needed] (co-official Arabic) and Equatorial Guinea (co-official French and Portuguese). Today, nearly 200,000 refugee Sahrawis are able to read and write in Spanish,[41] and several thousands have received university education in foreign countries as part of aid packages (mainly Cuba and Spain). In Equatorial Guinea, Spanish is the predominant language when counting native and non-native speakers (around 500,000 people), while Fang is the most spoken language by a number of native speakers.[42][43] It is also spoken in the Spanish cities in continental North Africa (Ceuta and Melilla) and in the autonomous community of Canary Islands (143,000 and 1,995,833 people, respectively). Within Northern Morocco, a former Franco-Spanish protectorate that is also geographically close to Spain, approximately 20,000 people speak Spanish.[44] It is spoken by some communities of Angola, because of the Cuban influence from the Cold War, and Nigeria by Afro-Cuban ex-slaves. In Côte d'Ivoire and Senegal, Spanish can be learned as a second foreign language in the public education system.[45] In 2008, Cervantes Institutes centers will be opened in Lagos and Johannesburg, the first one in the Sub-Saharan Africa[46]
[edit] Oceania
Among the countries and territories in Oceania, Spanish is also spoken in Easter Island, a territorial possession of Chile. According to the 2001 census, there are approximately 95,000 speakers of Spanish in Australia, 44,000 of which live in Greater Sydney[citation needed], where the older Mexican, Colombian, and Spanish populations and newer Argentine, El Salvadorian and Uruguyan communities live.[citation needed]
The island nations of Guam, Palau, Northern Marianas, Marshall Islands and Federated States of Micronesia all once had Spanish speakers, since Marianas and Caroline Islands were Spanish colonial possessions until late 19th century (see Spanish-American War), but Spanish has since been forgotten. It now only exists as an influence on the local native languages and also spoken by Hispanic American resident populations.
[edit] Variations
There are important variations among the regions of Spain and throughout Spanish-speaking America. In countries in Hispanophone America, it is preferable to use the word castellano to distinguish their version of the language from that of Spain, thus asserting their autonomy and national identity. In Spain the Castilian dialect's pronunciation is commonly regarded as the national standard, although a use of slightly different pronouns called laísmo of this dialect is deprecated. More accurately, for nearly everyone in Spain, "standard Spanish" means "pronouncing everything exactly as it is written,"[citation needed] an ideal which does not correspond to any real dialect, though the northern dialects are the closest to it. In practice, the standard way of speaking Spanish in the media is "written Spanish" for formal speech, "Madrid dialect" (one of the transitional variants between Castilian and Andalusian) for informal speech.[citation needed]
[edit] Voseo
Spanish has three second-person singular pronouns: tú, usted, and in some parts of Latin America, vos (the use of this pronoun and/or its verb forms is called voseo). In those regions where it is used, and generally speaking, tú and vos are informal and used with friends, in other countries vos is considered an archaic form. Usted is universally regarded as the formal address (derived from vuestra merced, "your grace"), and is used as a mark of respect, as when addressing one's elders or strangers.
Vos is used extensively as the primary spoken form of the second-person singular pronoun, although with wide differences in social consideration, in many countries of Latin America, including Argentina, Chile, Costa Rica, the central mountain region of Ecuador[citation needed], the State of Chiapas in Mexico, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Paraguay, Uruguay, the Paisa region of Colombia and the State of Zulia in Venezuela. There are some differences in the verbal endings for vos in each country. In Argentina, Uruguay, and increasingly in Paraguay and some Central American countries, it is also the standard form used in the media, but the media in other countries with voseo generally continue to use usted or tú except in advertisements, for instance. 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.
[edit] Ustedes
Spanish forms also differ regarding second-person plural pronouns. The Spanish dialects of Latin America have only one form of the second-person plural for daily use, ustedes (formal or familiar, as the case may be, though vosotros non-formal usage can sometimes appear in poetry and rhetorical or literary style). In Spain there are two forms — ustedes (formal) and vosotros (familiar). The pronoun vosotros is the plural form of tú in most of Spain, but in the Americas (and certain southern Spanish cities such as Cádiz or Seville, and in the Canary Islands) it is replaced with ustedes. It is notable 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 or Seville 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.
Some words can be 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, Chile and Uruguay. The everyday Spanish words coger (to catch, get, or pick up), pisar (to step on) and concha (seashell) are considered extremely rude in parts of Latin America, where the meaning of coger and pisar is also "to have sex" and concha means "vulva". The Puerto Rican word for "bobby pin" (pinche) is an obscenity in Mexico, and in Nicaragua simply means "stingy". Other examples include taco, which means "swearword" in Spain but is known to the rest of the world as a Mexican dish. Pija in many countries of Latin America is an obscene slang word for "penis", while in Spain the word also signifies "posh girl" or "snobby". Coche, which means "car" in Spain, for the vast majority of Spanish-speakers actually means "baby-stroller", in Guatemala is means "pig",[citation needed] while carro means "car" in some Latin American countries and "cart" in others, as well as in Spain.
The Real Academia Española (Royal Spanish Academy), together with the 21 other national ones (see Association of Spanish Language Academies), 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 standardized form of the language (Standard Spanish) is widely acknowledged for use in literature, academic contexts and the media.
[edit] Writing system
Spanish is written using the Latin alphabet, with the addition of the character ñ (eñe, representing the phoneme /ɲ/, a letter distinct from n, although typographically composed of an n with a tilde) and the digraphs ch (che, representing the phoneme /tʃ/) and ll (elle, representing the phoneme /ʎ/). However, the digraph rr (erre fuerte, "strong r", erre doble, "double r", or simply erre), which also represents a distinct phoneme /r/, is not similarly regarded as a single letter. Since 1994, the digraphs ch and ll are to be treated as letter pairs for collation purposes, though they remain a part of the alphabet. Words with ch are now alphabetically sorted between those with ce and ci, instead of following cz as they used to, and similarly for ll.[47][48]. Thus, as from 1994 Spanish uses the 26 letters of the International Alphabet plus the Spanish letter ñ. The 2 digraphs ch and ll are currently separated from the alphabet:
- a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, j, k, l, m, n, ñ, o, p, q, r, s, t, u, v, w, x, y, z.
With the exclusion of a very small number of regional terms such as México (see Toponymy of Mexico), pronunciation can be entirely determined from spelling. A typical Spanish word is stressed on the syllable before the last if it ends with a vowel (not including y) or with a vowel followed by n or s; it is stressed on the last syllable otherwise. Exceptions to this rule are indicated by placing an acute accent on the stressed vowel.
The acute accent is used, in addition, to distinguish between certain homophones, especially when one of them is a stressed word and the other one is a clitic: compare el ("the", masculine singular definite article) with él ("he" or "it"), or te ("you", object pronoun), de (preposition "of" or "from"), and se (reflexive pronoun) with té ("tea"), dé ("give") and sé ("I know", or imperative "be").
The interrogative pronouns (qué, cuál, dónde, quién, etc.) also receive accents in direct or indirect questions, and some demonstratives (ése, éste, aquél, etc.) can be accented when used as pronouns. The conjunction o ("or") is written with an accent between numerals so as not to be confused with a zero: e.g., 10 ó 20 should be read as diez o veinte rather than diez mil veinte ("10,020"). Accent marks are frequently omitted in capital letters (a widespread practice in the early days of computers where only lowercase vowels were available with accents), although the RAE advises against this.
When u is written between g and a front vowel (e or i), if it should be pronounced, it is written with a diaeresis (ü) to indicate that it is not silent as it normally would be (e.g., cigüeña, "stork", is pronounced /θiˈɣweɲa/; if it were written cigueña, it would be pronounced /θiˈɣeɲa/.
Interrogative and exclamatory clauses are introduced with inverted question ( ¿ ) and exclamation marks ( ¡ ).
[edit] Sounds
The phonemic inventory listed in the following table includes phonemes that are preserved only in some dialects, other dialects having merged them (such as yeísmo); these are marked with an asterisk (*). Sounds in parentheses are allophones.
Bilabial | Labio- dental |
Dental | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | m | n | ɲ | |||
Stop | p b | t d | tʃ (ɟʝ) | k g | ||
Fricative | f | *θ (ð) | s (z) | x | ||
Approximant | (β̞) | (ð̞) | ʝ | (ɣ˕) | ||
Trill | r | |||||
Tap | ɾ | |||||
Lateral | l | *ʎ |
By the 16th century, the consonant system of Spanish underwent the following important changes that differentiated it from neighboring Romance languages such as Portuguese and Catalan:
- Initial /f/, when it had evolved into a vacillating /h/, was lost in most words (although this etymological h- is preserved in spelling and in some Andalusian dialects is still aspirated).
- The bilabial approximant /β̞/ (which was written u or v) merged with the bilabial oclusive /b/ (written b). There is no difference between the pronunciation of orthographic b and v in contemporary Spanish, excepting emphatic pronunciations that cannot be considered standard or natural.
- The voiced alveolar fricative /z/ which existed as a separate phoneme in medieval Spanish merged with its voiceless counterpart /s/. The phoneme which resulted from this merger is currently spelled s.
- The voiced postalveolar fricative /ʒ/ merged with its voiceless counterpart /ʃ/, which evolved into the modern velar sound /x/ by the 17th century, now written with j, or g before e, i. Nevertheless, in most parts of Argentina and in Uruguay, y and ll have both evolved to /ʒ/ or /ʃ/.
- The voiced alveolar affricate /dz/ merged with its voiceless counterpart /ts/, which then developed into the interdental /θ/, now written z, or c before e, i. But in Andalusia, the Canary Islands and the Americas this sound merged with /s/ as well. See Ceceo, for further information.
The consonant system of Medieval Spanish has been better preserved in Ladino and in Portuguese, neither of which underwent these shifts.
[edit] Lexical stress
Spanish is a syllable-timed language, so each syllable has the same duration regardless of stress.[52][53] Stress most often occurs on any of the last three syllables of a word, with some rare exceptions at the fourth last. The tendencies of stress assignment are as follows:[54]
- In words ending in vowels and /s/, stress most often falls on the penultimate syllable.
- In words ending in all other consonants, the stress more often falls on the ultimate syllable.
- Preantepenultimate stress occurs rarely and only in words like guardándoselos ('saving them for him/her') where a clitic follows certain verbal forms.
In addition to the many exceptions to these tendencies, there are numerous minimal pairs which contrast solely on stress. For example, sabana, with penultimate stress, means 'savannah' while sábana, with antepenultimate stress, means 'sheet'; límite ('boundary'), limite ('[that] he/she limits') and limité ('I limited') also contrast solely on stress.
Phonological stress may be marked orthographically with an acute accent (ácido, distinción, etc). This is done according to the mandatory stress rules of Spanish orthography which are similar to the tendencies above (differing with words like distinción) and are defined so as to unequivocally indicate where the stress lies in a given written word. An acute accent may also be used to differentiate homophones (such as té for 'tea' and te
An amusing example of the significance of intonation in Spanish is the phrase ¿Cómo "cómo como"? ¡Como como como! ("What do you mean / 'how / do I eat'? / I eat / the way / I eat!").
[edit] Grammar
Spanish is a relatively inflected language, with a two-gender system and about fifty conjugated forms per verb, but limited inflection of nouns, adjectives, and determiners. (For a detailed overview of verbs, see Spanish verbs and Spanish irregular verbs.)
It is right-branching, uses prepositions, and usually, though not always, places adjectives after nouns. Its syntax is generally Subject Verb Object, though variations are common. It is a pro-drop language (allows the deletion of pronouns when pragmatically unnecessary) and verb-framed.
[edit] Samples
English | Spanish | IPA phonemic transcription (abstract phonemes) 1 |
IPA phonetic transcription (actual sounds) 2 |
---|---|---|---|
Spanish |
español |
/es.paˈɲol/ |
[e̞s̺.päˈɲo̞ˑl] [e̞s̻.päˈɲo̞ˑl] |
(Castilian) Spanish |
castellano |
/kas.teˈja.no/ /kas.teˈʒa.no/ /kas.teˈʎa.no/ |
[käs̺.t̪e̞ˈʝäˑ.no̞] [käs̻.t̪e̞ˈʝäˑ.no̞] [kɑh.t̪ʰe̞ˈʝäˑ.no̞] [kɑh.t̪ʰe̞ˈʒäˑ.no̞] [käs̺.t̪e̞ˈʎäˑ.no̞] |
English |
inglés |
/iNˈgles/ 3 |
[iŋˈgle̞ˑs̺] [iŋˈgle̞ˑs̻] |
Yes |
Sí |
/ˈsi/ |
[ˈs̺iˑ] [ˈs̻iˑ] |
No | No | /ˈno/ | [ˈno̞ˑ] |
Hello | Hola | /ˈo.la/ | [ˈo̞ˑ.lä] |
How are you? | ¿Cómo estás (tú)? (informal) ¿Cómo está (usted)? (formal) |
/ˈko.mo esˈtas/ |
[ˈko̞ˑ.mo̞ e̞s̺ˈt̪äˑs̺] [ˈko̞ˑ.mo̞ e̞s̻ˈt̪äˑs̻] [ˈko̞ˑ.mo̞ ɛhˈt̪ʰɑˑh] |
Good morning! |
Buenos días |
/ˈbue.nos ˈdi.as/ |
[ˈbwe̞ˑ.no̞s̬̺ ˈð̞iˑ.äs̺] [ˈbwe̞ˑ.no̞s̬̻ ˈð̞iˑ.äs̻] [ˈbwe̞ˑ.nɔh ˈð̞iˑ.ɑh] |
Good afternoon/evening! |
Buenas tardes |
/ˈbue.nas ˈtaR.des/ 3 |
[ˈbwe̞ˑ.näs̺ ˈt̪äˑɾ.ð̞e̞s̺] [ˈbwe̞ˑ.näs̻ ˈt̪äˑɾ.ð̞e̞s̻] [ˈbwe̞ˑ.nɑh ˈt̪ʰäˑɾ.ð̞ɛh] |
Good night! |
Buenas noches |
/ˈbue.nas ˈno.ces/ |
[ˈbwe̞ˑ.näs̺ ˈno̞ˑ.ʨe̞s̺] [ˈbwe̞ˑ.näs̻ ˈno̞ˑ.ʧe̞s̻] [ˈbwe̞ˑ.nɑ nˈːo̞ˑ.ʃɛh] |
Goodbye |
Adiós |
/aˈdios/ |
[äˈð̞jo̞ˑs̺] [äˈð̞jo̞ˑs̻] [äˈð̞jɔˑh] |
Please | Por favor | /poR faˈboR/ 3 | [po̞ɾ fäˈβ̞o̞ˑɾ] |
Thank you |
Gracias |
/ˈgRa.θias/ 3 /ˈgRa.sias/ 3 |
[ˈgɾäˑ.θjäs̺] [ˈgɾäˑ.s̻jäs̻] [ˈgɾäˑ.s̻jɑh] |
Excuse me |
Perdón |
/peRˈdoN/ 3 |
[pe̞ɾˈð̞o̞ˑŋ] [pe̞ɾˈð̞o̞ˑn] |
I'm sorry |
Lo siento |
/lo ˈsieN.to/ 3 |
[lo̞ ˈs̺je̞ˑn̪.t̪o̞] [lo̞ ˈs̻je̞ˑn̪.t̪o̞] |
Hurry! (informal) |
¡Date prisa! ¡Apúrate! |
/ˈda.te ˈpRi.sa/ 3 |
[ˈd̪äˑ.t̪e̞ ˈpɾiˑ.s̺ä] [ˈd̪äˑ.t̪e̞ ˈpɾiˑ.s̻ä] |
Because | Porque | /ˈpoR.ke/ 3 | [ˈpo̞ˑɾ.ke̞] |
Why? | ¿Por qué? | /poR ˈke/ 3 | [po̞ɾ ˈke̞ˑ] |
Who? |
¿Quién? |
/ˈkieN/ 3 |
[ˈkje̞ˑŋ] [ˈkje̞ˑn] |
What? | ¿Qué? | /ˈke/ | [ˈke̞ˑ] |
When? | ¿Cuándo? | /ˈkuaN.do/ 3 | [ˈkwäˑn̪.d̪o̞] |
Where? | ¿Dónde? | /ˈdoN.de/ 3 | [ˈdo̞ˑn̪.d̪e̞] |
How? | ¿Cómo? | /ˈko.mo/ | [ˈko̞ˑ.mo̞] |
How much? | ¿Cuánto? | /ˈkuaN.to/ 3 | [ˈkwäˑn̪.t̪o̞] |
I do not understand | No entiendo | /no eNˈtieN.do/ 3 | [nŏ̞ e̞n̪ˈt̪je̞ˑn̪.d̪o̞] |
Help me (please) (formal) Help me! (informal) |
Ayúdeme ¡Ayúdame! |
/aˈju.de.me/ /aˈʒu.de.me/ /aˈju.da.me/ /aˈʒu.de.me/ |
[äˈʝuˑ.ð̞e̞.me̞] [äˈʒuˑ.ð̞e̞.me̞] [äˈʝuˑ.ð̞ä.me̞] [äˈʒuˑ.ð̞ä.me̞] |
Where's the bathroom? |
¿Dónde está el baño? |
/ˈdoN.de esˈta el ˈba.ɲo] 3 |
[ˈdo̞ˑn̪.d̪e̞ e̞s̺ˈt̪äˑ ĕ̞l ˈβ̞äˑ.ɲo̞] [ˈdo̞ˑn̪.d̪e̞ e̞s̻ˈt̪äˑ ĕ̞l ˈβ̞äˑ.ɲo̞] [ˈdo̞ˑn̪.d̪e̞ ɛhˈt̪ʰäˑ ĕ̞l ˈβ̞äˑ.ɲo̞] |
Do you speak English? (informal) |
¿Hablas inglés? |
/ˈa.blas iNˈgles/ 3 |
[ˈäˑ.β̞läs̺ iŋˈgle̞ˑs̺] [ˈäˑ.β̞läs̻ iŋˈgle̞ˑs̻] [ˈäˑ.β̞lɑh iŋˈglɛˑh] |
Cheers! (toast) |
¡Salud! |
/saˈlud/ |
[s̺aˈluˑð̞] [s̻aˈluˑð̞] |
1 Phonemic representation of the abstract phonological entities (phonemes), 2 phonetic representation of the actual sounds pronounced (phones). In both cases, when several representations are given, the first one corresponds to the dialect in the recording (Castilian with yeísmo) and the rest to several other dialects not in the recording. 3 Capital /N/ and /R/ (non-standard IPA) are used here to represent the nasal and rhotic archiphonemes that neutralize the phonemic oppositions [m]-[n]-[ɲ] and [r]-[ɾ], respectively, in syllabe coda and intra-cluster positions. |
[edit] See also
[edit] Local varieties
[edit] References
- ^ Encarta-Most Spoken languages
- ^ Ciberamerica-Castellano
- ^ El Nuevo Diario
- ^ Terra Noticias
- ^ Universidad de México[unreliable source?]{{subst:Sup|(cached URL)}}
- ^ a b c Instituto Cervantes ("El Mundo" news)
- ^ Yahoo Press Room
- ^ a b c d Spanish. ethnologue.
- ^ Most widely spoken languages by Nations Online
- ^ Most spoken languages by Ask Men
- ^ Encarta Languages Spoken by More Than 10 Million People
- ^ a b Universidad de México[unreliable source?]{{subst:Sup|(cached URL)}}<
- ^ Ethnologue, 1999
- ^ CIA World Factbook, Field Listing - Languages (World).
- ^ CIA The World Factbook United States
- ^ United States Census BureauPDF (1.86 MiB), Statistical Abstract of the United States: page 47: Table 47: Languages Spoken at Home by Language: 2003
- ^ Foreign Language Enrollments in United States Institutions of Higher LearningPDF (129 KiB), MLA Fall 2002.
- ^ World Internet Usage Statistics
- ^ George Weber, TOP LANGUAGES: The World's 10 most influential Languages, andaman.org, <http://www.andaman.org/BOOK/reprints/weber/rep-weber.htm>. Retrieved on 2007-12-29[unreliable source?]
- ^ CIA World Factbook — Gibraltar
- ^ Andorra — People. MSN Encarta. Retrieved on 2007-08-20.
- ^ Background Note: Andorra. U.S. Department of State: Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs (January 2007). Retrieved on 2007-08-20.
- ^ BBC Education — Languages, Languages Across Europe — Spanish.
- ^ Switzerland's Four National Languages. all-about-switzerland.info. Retrieved on 2007-09-19.
- ^ Ethnologue - Paraguay(2000). Guaraní is also the most-spoken language in Paraguay by its native speakers.
- ^ "Puerto Rico Elevates English", the New York Times, January 29, 1993. Retrieved on 2007-10-06.
- ^ Population Census 2000, Major Findings. Central Statistical Office, Ministry of Budget Management, Belize (2000). Archived from the original on 2007-06-21. Retrieved on 2007-12-20.
- ^ Belize Population and Housing Census 2000
- ^ CIA World Factbook — Belize
- ^ The Secretariat for The Implementation of Spanish, Government of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago
- ^ MERCOSUL, Portal Oficial (Portuguese)
- ^ BrazilMag.com, August 08, 2005.
- ^ Lipski, John M. (2006). "Too close for comfort? the genesis of “portuñol/portunhol”". Selected Proceedings of the 8th Hispanic Linguistics Symposium. . ed. Timothy L. Face and Carol A. Klee, 1–22. Somerville, MA: Cascadilla Proceedings Project
- ^ U.S. Census Bureau Hispanic or Latino by specific origin.
- ^ U.S. Census Bureau 1. Percent of People 5 Years and Over Who Speak Spanish at Home: 2006, U.S. Census Bureau 2. 34,044,945 People 5 Years and Over Who Speak Spanish at Home: 2006
- ^ Foreign language class enrollments in U.S. schools of higher learningPDF (129 KiB), MLA Fall 2002.
- ^ Facts, Figures, and Statistics About Spanish, American Demographics, 1998.
- ^ 1973 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines, thecorpusjuris.com, <http://www.thecorpusjuris.com/laws/constitutions/8-philippineconstitutions/68-1973-constitution.html>. Retrieved on 6 April 2008 (See Article XV, Section 3(3)
- ^ Ethnologue. Ethnologue Report for the Philippines.
- ^ 1,816,389 Spanish-speakers — “Cuadro 3. Número de hispanohablantes en países y territorios donde el español no es lengua oficial”, Demografía de la lengua española, cvc.cervantes.es, citing Calendario Atlante de Agostini 1997, 1998, <http://cvc.cervantes.es/obref/anuario/anuario_98/moreno/cuadro03.htm>. Retrieved on 6 April 2008. The Cervantes Institute source is not a primary or even a secondary source, as it just quotes an Italian almanac (Calendario Atlante de Agostini 1997, Novara, Instituto Geográfico de Agostino, 1996, p. 315, that gives, without sources, 3% of the population speaking Spanish). To this the Cervantes Institute adds 689.000 speakers of Chavacano (not Spanish proper, but a Spanish creole, spoken mostly in Zamboanga City and in the provinces of Zamboanga del Sur, Zamboanga Sibugay, Zamboanga del Norte, and Basilan. It is also spoken in some areas of Cavite, Davao, and Cotabato), according to data from A. Quilis (La lengua española en cuatro mundos, Madrid, Mapfre, 1992, p. 82), without specifying if in the first estimate these Chavacano speakers were already counted or not (thus raising the total figure to 2.450.000). The Cervantes site does state that these estimate contradict the Census. One should also notice that English is an official language in the Philippines, unlike Spanish (see The Official Website of the Republic of the Philippines).
- ^ El refuerzo del español llega a los saharauis con una escuela en los campos de Tinduf
- ^ Ethnologue -Equatorial Guinea ((2000)
- ^ CIA World Factbook - Equatorial Guinea (Last updated 20 September, 2007)
- ^ Morocco.com, The Languages of Morocco.
- ^ El idioma español en África subsahariana
- ^ El Cervantes espera duplicar las matrículas para el 2012 dentro de la 'gran operación de comunicación' del español
- ^ Diccionario Panhispánico de Dudas, 1st ed.: "[...] en el X Congreso de la Asociación de Academias de la Lengua Española, celebrado en 1994, se acordó adoptar el orden alfabético latino universal, en el que la ch y la ll no se consideran letras independientes. En consecuencia, las palabras que comienzan por estas dos letras, o que las contienen, pasan a alfabetizarse en los lugares que les corresponden dentro de la c y de la l, respectivamente. Esta reforma afecta únicamente al proceso de ordenación alfabética de las palabras, no a la composición del abecedario, del que los dígrafos ch y ll siguen formando parte."
- ^ "No obstante, en el X Congreso de la Asociación de Academias de la Lengua Española, celebrado en 1994, se acordó adoptar para los diccionarios académicos, a petición de varios organismos internacionales, el orden alfabético latino universal, en el que la ch y la ll no se consideran letras independientes. En consecuencia, estas dos letras pasan a alfabetizarse en los lugares que les corresponden dentro de la C (entre -cg- y -ci-) y dentro de la L (entre -lk- y -lm-), respectivamente." Real Academia Española, Explanation at http://www.spanishpronto.com/ (in Spanish and English)
- ^ Ch, in Diccionario de la lengua española de la Real Academia Española
- ^ Ll, in Diccionario de la lengua española de la Real Academia Española
- ^ Martínez-Celdrán et al (2003:255)
- ^ Cressey (1978:152)
- ^ Abercrombie (1967:98)
- ^ Eddington (2000:96)
[edit] External links
- (Spanish) Dictionary of the RAE Real Academia Española's official Spanish language dictionary
- Spanish evolution from Latin
- Spanish phrasebook on WikiTravel
- The Project Gutenberg EBook of A First Spanish Reader by Erwin W. Roessler and Alfred Remy.
- Spanish - BBC Languages
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