[go: up one dir, main page]
More Web Proxy on the site http://driver.im/Jump to content

Spanish/Lesson 1

From Wikibooks, open books for an open world
Lessons: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 - 8 - 9 - 10 - 11

Introduction

[edit | edit source]

This is the very first lesson in learning a second language, the Spanish language!

This lesson begins with simple greetings, and covers important ideas of the Spanish language. Throughout education, methods of teaching Spanish have changed greatly. Years ago, the Spanish language was taught simply by memory. Today, however, the Spanish Language is taught by moving more slowly and covering grammar and spelling rules.

Again, this is an introduction. If this is the first time you are attempting to learn Spanish, do not become discouraged if you cannot understand, pronounce, or memorize some of the things discussed here.

In addition, learning a second language requires a basic understanding of your own language. You may find, as you study Spanish, that you learn a lot about English as well. At their core, all languages share some simple components like verbs, nouns, adjectives, and plurals. English, as your first language, comes naturally to you and you don't think about things like subject-verb agreement, verb conjugation, or usage of the various tenses; yet you use these concepts on a daily basis.

While English is described as a very complicated language to learn, many of the distinguishing grammar structures have been simplified over the years. This is not true for many other languages. Following the grammatical conventions of Spanish will be very important, and can actually change the meaning of phrases. You'll see what is meant by this as you learn your first verbs ser and estar.

Do not become discouraged! You can do it.

Dialogue 1

[edit | edit source]

Two good friends - Carmen and Roberto - are meeting:

Flag of Spain
Flag of Spain
Diálogo - ¡Hola!
Carmen: ¡Hola, Roberto! ¿Cómo estás?
Hello Roberto How are you?

Roberto: Yo estoy bien, gracias. Y tú, ¿cómo estás?
I'm fine, thank you. And you?
Carmen: Estoy bien.
I'm fine.
Roberto: ¿Hay algo nuevo para contar?
Anything new happen?
Carmen: No mucho. ¡Adiós, Roberto!
Not much; goodbye, Roberto

Roberto: Adiós, hasta mañana.
Good bye; see you tomorrow


Listen to the dialogue. (139KB)

Vocabulary

[edit | edit source]
Spanish Flag
Spanish Flag
El Vocabulario - ¡Hola!
Hello
¿Cómo estás? How are you? (informal)
¿Cómo está usted? How are you? (formal)
(Yo) estoy bien I'm fine.
(muchas) gracias Thank you very much.
de nada You're welcome.
y And
You
¿Qué pasa? What's going on?
¿Qué tal? What's up?
¿Qué hay de nuevo? What's new?
no mucho Not much
nada Nothing
¡Adiós! Goodbye!
¡Hasta mañana! See you tomorrow!
¡Hasta luego! See you later!
¡Nos vemos! See you!

Dialogue 2

[edit | edit source]

Two people - Señor González and Señora Pérez - are meeting for the first time:

Flag of Spain
Flag of Spain
Diálogo - ¡Buenos días!
Señor González: Buenos días. ¿Cómo se llama usted?
Good day, what is your name?

Señora Pérez: Me llamo Ana Pérez. Y usted, ¿cómo se llama?
My name is Anna Perez and you?
Señor González: Soy Luis González. Encantado.
I am Luis Gonzalez, nice to meet you.

Señora Pérez: Encantada.

Nice to meet you.

Listen to the Dialogue. listen

Vocabulary

[edit | edit source]
Spanish Flag
Spanish Flag
El Vocabulario - ¡Buenos días!
Good day!
Buenos días listen

Buenas tardes listen
Buenas noches listen
Me llamo... listen
Soy... listen
listen
¿Cómo te llamas? listen
usted listen
¿Cómo se llama (usted)? listen
Encantado/Encantada listen

Mucho gusto. listen
Good morning.

Good afternoon.
Good night.
My name is... (literally: I call myself...)
I am...
you (informal)
What is your name? (informal)
you (formal)
What is your name? (formal)
Nice to meet you.

It's a pleasure [to meet you]


Exercise: Greetings

Grammar: Subject Pronouns

[edit | edit source]
Spanish Flag
Spanish Flag
Gramática - Los pronombres
Person English equivalent Spanish equivalent
1st person singular I yo
2nd person singular singular you (informal)
3rd person singular he, she, you (formal) él, ella, usted
1st person plural we nosotros, nosotras
2nd person plural plural you (informal) vosotros, vosotras (used primarily in Spain)
3rd person plural they, you (formal) ellos, ellas, ustedes


A few things to keep in mind:

  • It is normal in Spanish to omit the personal pronoun (i.e. you seldom say yo estoy bien, but estoy bien, and you ask ¿Cómo se llama? instead of ¿Cómo se llama usted?) because the specific conjugation of a verb usually indicates which person is the subject. However, usted, él and ella all use the same verb form so if you choose to drop the pronoun in this case it must be clear in the situational context which pronoun is being referenced.
  • In Spain the vosotros form can be used to address a group of familiar people (e.g. friends), and ustedes is used with more formality (e.g. recent acquaintances). In Latin American countries ustedes is used also for a familiar group of people; in these countries the "vosotros" form is almost never used.
  • In Argentina, parts of Uruguay, and some other countries, the form is replaced with vos.
  • Usted and ustedes can be abbreviated as Ud. and Uds., respectively.

Grammar: Verbs ser and estar

[edit | edit source]

Spanish has two different words that can be translated with "to be". Ser is used more for more permanent characteristics ("Soy Luis") whereas estar is used for more temporary or changeable conditions, such as location ("La papelera está al lado del escritorio", "The trash can is beside the desk") and feeling ("Estoy bien"). A good way to remember when to use "estar" is by using the rhyme, "To tell how you feel or where you are, always use the verb estar." In future lessons we will come back to the uses of ser and estar.

Here we will look at the conjugations in the present indicative.

Spanish Flag
Spanish Flag
El Vocabulario - El verbo ser
Saying "to be"
singular formal plural
first person (yo) soy
(I) am
(nosotros) somos
(we) are
second person (tú) eres/(vos) sos*
(you) are
(usted) es
(you) are
(ustedes) son/(vosotros) sois*
(you) are
third person (él) es
(he) is
(ella) es
(she) is
(ellos/ellas) son
(they) are
* The first form indicates usage most common of peninsular Spanish (also used in Mexico), and the second form indicates usage most common of South American Spanish.
† The first form indicates the masculine plural, and the second form indicates the feminine plural. In cases where the group in question is of mixed gender, the masculine is used.


Spanish Flag
Spanish Flag
El Vocabulario - El verbo estar
Saying "to be"
singular formal plural
first person (yo) estoy
(I) am
(nosotros) estamos
(we) are
second person (tú/vos)* estás
(you) are
(usted) está
(you) are
(ustedes) están/(vosotros) estáis*
(you) are
third person (él) está
(he) is
(ella) está
(she) is
(ellos/ellas) están
(they) are
* The first form indicates usage most common of peninsular Spanish (also used in Mexico), and the second form indicates usage most common of South American Spanish.
† The first form indicates the masculine plural, and the second form indicates the feminine plural. In cases where the group in question is of mixed gender, the masculine is used.

Ejemplos de los verbos ser y estar (Examples of the verbs ser and estar)

[edit | edit source]
Spanish (español) English (inglés)
Yo soy una persona. I am a person.
Yo estoy en casa. I am at home
eres un buen hombre. You are a good man.
estás en el sitio correcto. You are in the correct place.
Él es mi amigo. He is my friend.
Él está jugando muy bien.* He is playing very well.

Note: *This use of estar is the Spanish present progressive which is used for actions in progress. More about the present progressive in Lesson 4

Dialect Note: Spanish which uses the vos form conjugates ser with the following irregular form: sos.

Exercise: Verbs ser and estar

Spanish uses a different verb (haber) to express "there is " and "there are". The form of haber used for this purpose is hay, for both singular ("there is") and plural ("there are").

English (inglés) Spanish (español)
there is
there are
hay

Spanish alphabet

[edit | edit source]

Here is the normal Spanish alphabet. However words aren't alphabetized by it. Please read the notes and sections below. (Blue letters are a part of the normal English alphabet.)

Audio: OGG (646KB)

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n ñ o p q r rr s t u v w x y z
Notes about Ñ and RR

N and Ñ are considered two different letters, as are RR and R (though no words begin with RR). They are alphabetized as separate letters, so Ñ always comes after N, regardless of where it appears in the word. Ex: muñeca comes after municipal, and carro comes after carta.

Notes about CH and LL

CH and LL used to be considered as distinct letters of the alphabet, but in 1994, the Real Academia Española (Spanish Royal Academy) declared that CH and LL were not letters but digraphs. Accordingly, words beginning with CH and LL are now alphabetized under C and L, respectively.

Notes about K and W

K and W are part of the alphabet but are mostly seen in foreign derived words and names, such as karate and whisky. For instances, kilo is commonly used in Latin America to refer to a kilogram.


Although the above will help you understand, proper pronunciation of Spanish consonants is a bit more complicated:

Most of the consonants are pronounced as they are in American English with these exceptions:

  • b like the English b at the start of a word and after m or n; otherwise is pronounced like a cross between a v and a b (in Spanish there's no distinction for b and v)
  • c before a, o, u and other consonants, like English k
  • c before i and e like English th in “think” (in Latin America is like English s)
  • ch like ch in “cheese”
  • d between vowels (even if it starts a word following a word ending in a vowel) or at the end of a word, like English d in dental
  • g before e or i like the Scottish pronunciation of ch in “loch”, except that it is voiced
  • g before a or o like g in “get”
  • h is always silent (except in the digraph ch)
  • j like the Scottish pronunciation of ch in “loch”, except that it is voiced
  • ll traditionally pronounced like lli in “million”, it is now pronounced like English y in “yes”, except that it is more voiced
  • ñ like ni in “onion” (or gn in French cognac)
  • q like the English k
  • r slighty trilled; like a soft d except at the beginning of a word or after l, n or s where it is trilled
  • rr should be trilled longer than a single r
  • v like the English b at the start of a word and after m or n; otherwise is pronounced like a cross between a v and a b (in Spanish there's no distinction for b and v)
  • z like the English th (in Latin America, like English s)

Vowel pronunciation

[edit | edit source]

The pronunciation of vowels is as follows:

  • a [a] "La Mano" as in "altar" (ah)
  • e [e] "Mente" as in "melow" (e)
  • i [i] "Sin" as in "into" (i)
  • o [o] "Como" as in "opera". (short o)
  • u [u] "Lunes" as in "lunatic" (oo)

The "u" is always silent after q (as in "qué" pronounced kā).

Spanish also uses the ¨ (diaeresis) diacritic mark over the vowel u to indicate that it is pronounced separately in places where it would normally be silent. For example, in words such as vergüenza ("shame") or pingüino ("penguin"), the "u" (sounds the same as the "u" in "ultra") is pronounced similarly but with more strength to the English "w" forming a diphthong with the following vowel: [we] and [wi] respectively. It is also used to preserve sound in stem changes and in commands.

Semi-Vowels

[edit | edit source]
  • y [ʝ] "Reyes" similar to the y of "yet", but more voiced (in some parts of Latin America it is pronounced as s in "vision" [ʒ] or sh in "flash" [ʃ])

At the end of a word or when it means "and" ("y") it is pronounced like i.

Acute accents

[edit | edit source]

Spanish uses the ´ (Acute) diacritic mark over vowels to indicate a vocal stress on a word that would normally be stressed on another syllable; Stress is contrastive. For example, the word ánimo is normally stressed on a, meaning "mood, spirit." While animo is stressed on ni meaning "I cheer." And animó is stressed on meaning "he cheered."

Additionally the acute mark is used to disambiguate certain words which would otherwise be homographs. It's used in various question word or relative pronoun pairs such as cómo (how?)& como (as), dónde(where?) & donde (where), and some other words such as (you) & tu (your), él (he/him) & el (the).

A E I O U
á é í ó ú

Emphasis

[edit | edit source]

The rules of stress in Spanish are:

1. When the word ends in a vowel or in "n" or "s" the emphasis falls on the second to last syllable.

Eg: Mañana, Como, Dedos, Hablan.

2. When the word ends in a consonant other than "n" or "s", the emphasis falls on the last syllable.

Eg: Ciudad, Comer, Reptil.

3. If the above two rules don't apply, there will be an accent to show the stress.

Eg: Fíjate, Inglés, Teléfono.

4. SPECIAL CASE: Adverbs ending in -mente, which are derived from adjectives, have two stresses. The first stress occurs in the adjective part of the adverb, on the syllable where the adjective would normally be stressed. The second stress occurs on the -men- syllable.

Eg: Solamente, Felizmente, Cortésmente.


Lessons: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 - 8 - 9 - 10 - 11