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pronunciation guide
*pronunciation
You don’t need perfect pronunciation to be able to
communicate – it’s enough to get the sounds approximately
right and to stress the words in the correct place.
Spanish pronunciation is very regular – you can tell how
a word is pronounced from the way it’s written, once you
know what sound each letter (or group of letters) represents.
A pronunciation guide is given with the phrases in this book
– the system is based on English sounds, as described below.
Spanish vowels are pronounced the same wherever they
occur (unlike English, in which each vowel can be pronounced
in several distinct ways).
a
a in ‘cat’
a
nada
au
ow in ‘cow’
ow
autobús owtoboos
ai, ay
i in ‘pile’
iy
hay
iy
e
e in ‘met’
e
cena
thena
ei, ey
ay in ‘say’
ay
veinte
baynte
i
ee in ‘meet’
ee
amigo
ameego
i (unstressed) y in ‘yet’
y
gracias
grathyas
o
o in ‘lot’
o
como
komo
oi, oy
oy in ‘boy’
oy
soy
soy
u
oo in ‘moon’
oo
una
oona
u (before w in ‘wet’
another vowel) u in que, not
qui, gue, gui pronounced
w
cuenta
muy
kwenta
mwee
–
quién
guerra
kyen
gerra
Except in the cases listed below, Spanish words are stressed
on the last but one syllable: tengo, gustan, España,
excursiones. The exceptions are:
nada
*consonants
spanish
approx english shown in example
consonants equivalent
book as
1 If a word ends in a consonant other than n or s, the stress
is on the last syllable: Madrid, acampar, español.
2 If there is a written accent, the stress is where the accent
is: estación, Málaga, café.
approx english shown in example
equivalent
book as
*stress
In this book, a stressed syllable is shown in the pronunciation
guide by bold type: estathyon, tengo.
6
spanish
vowels
b
b in ‘but’
b
baño
banyo
c (followed th in ‘thick’
by e or i)
th
cenar
thenar
c (otherwise) c in ‘can’
k
cama
kama
pronunciation guide
pronunciation guide
Many Spanish consonants are pronounced in a similar way to
English. The main differences are with c, g, h, j, ll, ñ, qu, r, v, z.
*vowels
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