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Pronunciation

It is important to understand the common sounds found in Spanish.

Vowel sounds

Vowel sounds

  • Vowel sounds make sure we are understood correctly in Spanish.
  • Unlike English, all Spanish vowel sounds are short.
  • Join vowels with consonants to create short words, and practice saying them out loud. For example:
    • MA
    • ME
    • MI
    • MO
    • MU
Differences in pronunciation from English

Differences in pronunciation from English

  • ‘J’ sounds like ‘h’ or 'hey' but from the throat.
  • ‘ll’ sounds like the ‘y’ sound in English.
  • ‘Z’ sounds like ‘th’ in thanks.
  • ‘rr’ means you have to roll the 'r'! Put the tongue on the roof of your mouth to try.
  • In Spanish we also roll the ‘r’ at the beginning of a word, ie. Roberto (Rrroberto).
Pronunciation rules

Pronunciation rules

  • The ‘ñ’ accent sounds like a ‘ny’, eg. España sounds like Espanya.
  • The letter 'H' is always silent at the beginning of a word, e.g. hotel = 'otel'.
  • 'll', 'cc', 'rr', 'nn' and 'ee' are the only letters that can be doubled.
    • You can remember this with CaRoLiNa - the only consonants that can be doubled are in this word!
  • 'Ph' does not exist in Spanish - it is replaced with 'f', e.g. elefante, telefono, foto.
4 ways to pronounce the letter 'C'

4 ways to pronounce the letter 'C'

  • When followed by an 'O' or 'A' it is hard like a 'K', e.g. Córdoba, Cádiz.
  • When followed by 'U' it is pronounced like 'Qu' in queen, e.g. la cuenta.
  • When followed by ‘I’ and ‘e’ it is pronounced as a ‘th’, e.g. situación is pronounced ‘sit-u-a-thion’.
  • When it is doubled, 'cc', it is a hard sound, e.g. di-rec-ción (Dee-reck-thion).
Use of the accent in Spanish

Use of the accent in Spanish

  • The ´ accent in Spanish is used to stress a vowel in Spanish.
  • It is important to pronounce the accent correctly, otherwise the word can take on a different meaning.
  • Eg. 'esta', means a totally different thing to 'está'.
    • 'Esta' means 'this' (when talking about a feminine noun), and 'está' means 'he/she/it is'.
    • The only way to tell the difference in meaning is through the pronunciation of the accent.
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