How to Learn Spanish in 30 Days
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How to Learn Spanish in 30 Days

Giovanni Sordelli

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eBook - ePub

How to Learn Spanish in 30 Days

Giovanni Sordelli

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About This Book

This book will allow you to learn Spanish in only 30 days, starting from scratch. And this is more than a simple promise. Let me explain…
The method is very simple: this book is divided in 30 chapters, one for each day, to let you learn the basics of this language in just one month. To make the most of this course, you just need to follow one rule: reading one chapter every day, no more, no less. If you follow this rule and the guidelines included in this book, the result is guaranteed. Forget about the usual boring grammar courses, with their impersonal style. “ How to learn Spanish in 30 days ” has been created with all the trappings of self-help, as a practical manual, with a personal, fun and motivational touch. It is full of many curious anecdotes and useful pieces of advice not only to speak in Spanish, but also to help you while travelling. If you are still not convinced, keep reading… FROM THE PREFACE… (…) You are going to tell me: “ so, in 30 days I will be able to learn an entire language?! ”. The answer is YES!
First of all, as any valuable product, it has brilliantly passed the quality check: friends and relatives have tested this manual and the following month they did pretty well with grammar and vocabulary, trust me.
Of course, in 30 days no one becomes a native speaker: but you can build a strong foundation on which to build a beautiful house. Do you get what I mean?
Studying a little bit every day is a secret as simple as it is effective to make the learning easier and quicker.
I will give you the opportunity to analyse in depth every little secret about grammar and vocabulary, and you must really promise me that you will do everything you can to complete this rich training: consult online newspapers, watch films or TV series with subtitles, read a good book with a dictionary next to you, in short take every little opportunity to be in contact with Spanish as much as possible.
Then there will be space for real dialogues in Spanish, the testing ground for your theoretical skills. When you go on holiday to a Spanish-speaking country or you will have to use Spanish in any other situation, you will just want to do your best.
Think about this: one month. 30 days of studying will help you learning a new language, improving your curriculum, immersing yourself in a new and different world. It will be a special month, and you will be satisfied.

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Information

Publisher
HOW2 Edizioni
Year
2021
ISBN
9788893055376

1.1. Neither fish nor fowl: B and V
Ā 

Letā€™s start with a bang. Well yes, these two letters, as a matter of fact, are pronounced in the same way, but beware: their pronunciation is nearly indescribable, since it is represented by a sound exactly halfway between B for Ball and V for Vase. They taught me that in this way and it worked: try to close your lips a little as if to blow gently. Now do not simply blow, but at the same time make a soft sound with your vocal chords: there it is, the pronunciation of these letters is exactly the one of the combination of the blow and the sound.
You just need a bit of practice with some Spanish words (better when you are alone, so you do not look crazy!) and then it all comes naturally. For instance, how would you pronounce ā€œlavarā€ (to wash) and ā€œloboā€ (wolf), maybe put in a sentence like ā€œYo lavo el loboā€? This exercise is also best done in the silence of your home!
Ā 

1.2. How to pronounce C imitating a snake
Ā 

Try to think about how you pronounce the English word ā€œthinkā€: there, that sound similar to the hiss of a snake is used in all the Spanish words with ā€œceā€ and ā€œciā€.

ā€œThinkā€ and ā€œCiegoā€ are then pronounced in the same way. People who smoke surely need a ā€œceniceroā€ that collects the ash. There, try to pronounce this word, which is not so easy!
Ā 
Moreover, in the words with ā€œchā€, the letter ā€œhā€ is not pronounced at all.
Ā 
Any difficulties? No, because if you know the cha cha you are golden!
Ā 

1.3. How to pronounce G imitating a moka pot
Ā 

To learn how to pronounce the words that contain ā€œgeā€ and ā€œgiā€ you need to go to the kitchen: make some coffee with a moka pot and try to reproduce its noise as it comes up.
There, this is the exact sound to pronounce words like ā€œgenteā€ and ā€œpĆ”ginaā€. You will see that the more you practice and read out loud sentences that contain these letters, the pronunciation will become spontaneous and absolutely natural.
Ā 
P.S. Do not worry if the letter ā€œaā€ in ā€œpĆ”ginaā€ is accented: in a few days I will explain to you the reason. However, it is good to know early on that accents are fundamental in the written language, and they are always used. Ok, letā€™s move on and focus again on pronunciation.
Ā 

1.3.1. GUE-GUI: watch out!
Ā 

In this case you just need to replace the letter ā€œuā€ with ā€œhā€, as in the English words ā€œghettoā€ and ā€œghoulā€. That being said, how do you pronounce then ā€œguerraā€ and ā€œguitarraā€?
Ā 

1.3.2. GƜE-GƜI: watch out for the diaeresis!
Ā 

There are few words that contain the diaeresis, and beware not to pronounce them for example as in the German words ā€œfĆ¼rā€, which means ā€œforā€. In Spanish, in fact, the diaeresis indicates that the vowel in question must be pronounced.
A very nice animal (you need to go a long way to see it!) comes to mind: I am talking about the ā€œpingĆ¼inoā€. Without the diaeresis on the vowel, the pronunciation would be mangled. Or, if you go on holiday to the Caribbean Sea and you happen to stay in Nicaragua, you will reside in a ā€œnicaragĆ¼enseā€ facility.
Ā 

1.4. H is mute
Ā 

We know that in English the letter ā€œhā€ (except for some cases) is aspirated. In Spanish, on the contrary, ā€œhā€ is mute: you do not need then to aspirate the ā€œhā€ to say ā€œhoraā€ or ā€œhierbaā€.
Ā 

1.5. Second coffee of the day to learn how to pronounce J
Ā 

Make another coffee with a moka pot as before, imitate its sound as it comes up and there you have it. Between a sip and another, savour also the fact of understanding how to pronounce ā€œjā€ next to each vowel. One example? As you may have noticed, I like peculiar animals: so after visiting some nice penguins in the South Pole, why not hopping over to the African savannah to see some ā€œJirafasā€ which can be over 5 metres tall thanks to their long necks?
Ā 
An excellent exercise to learn this strange sound: make some fresh coffee with a moka pot and meanwhile leaf through the atlas to looking for the Spanish town of GijĆ³n. While you are searching and the coffee is coming up, keep pronouncing this very strange and very difficult word: the others will then be a piece of cake. Among the others, try to say out loud ā€œgeneralā€, ā€œĆ”ngelā€, ā€œnostalgiaā€ and ā€œoriginalā€. They are written in the same way in English, but how would you pronounce them if you were in Spain?
Ā 

1.6. You write it double, but LL is not actually double
Ā 

There is no doubling of the letter ā€œLā€, so when we come across words like ā€œPaellaā€ the sound is like the one you pronounce in the word ā€œyesā€.
Have you ever been to Barcelona? You might have seen the very strange letter ā€œLĀ·Lā€ somewhere, maybe if you have taken the metro at ā€œParalĀ·lelā€ station: in Catalan the dot between the two Ls indicates the doubling of the consonant. Since it does not exist in Spanish, the pronunciation is the one described above.
Ā 

1.7. An ingredient for lasagna? Ƒ!
Ā 

Bolognese lasagna is so good, is it not? Not surprisingly it is the favourite dish of many people, and it is so good that it is highly popular even in Spain: just go into any supermarket, read ā€œLasaƱasā€ and buy it.
Anyway, as far as I am concerned the taste of the homemade one is unique and unmatched.
Ā 

1.8. QUE-QUI: watch out again!
Ā 

These trigraphs cause some problems only at the beginning: indeed, when you learn that the pronunciation is actually the same as the English ā€œke-kiā€, there you have it.

Surely you know the great Colombian writer Gabriel Garcƭa MƔrquez, so the pronunciation is already served on the table!

Or, if you whisper ā€œte quieroā€ to your partner, you will surely make them very happy.
Ā 

1.9.X: many but little problems
Ā 

The words that contain this letter are very rare, and moreover the pronunciation varies significantly depending on the different Spanish regions, called ā€œComunidades AutĆ³nomasā€.
A quite common indication, but still subject to variations, is that at the beginning of a word ā€œxā€ is pronounced like ā€œsā€ (xilĆ³fono), while it is pronounced normally in all the other cases.
Luckily there are few exceptions, since the numbers of words with ā€œxā€ is indeed very limited. If this is a problem, you will agree that it is really little and easily solved.
Ā 

1.10. Y: a bit like LL
Ā 

In Spanish as spoken in Spain, correctly referred to as Castilian, the sound of Y is exactly like the one of LL that you already know.
In the rest of the Spanish-speaking world this is actually one of the features that differentiates it from Spain. How? And the others? Be patient, in the next chapter you will find all the answers.
I will just tell you in advance that speaking Spanish in Madrid, in Mexico City or in Buenos Aires is not exactly the same thing, including for a matter of pronunciation of other letters. Enough, I have already said too much!
Ā 
Try to pronounce for example ā€œyogurtā€ (with the accent on the ā€œuā€ though!) or Goya, the name of the famous painter.
Ā 

1.11. How to pronounce Z imitating a snake
Ā 

Do you know what a hissing snake sound like? Surely you do, since now you can read words like ā€œBarcelonaā€ or ā€œCineā€ (cinema). You do the same with the last letter of the alphabet.

A little trick: in Spanish there are not words with ā€œzeā€ and ā€œziā€, since their function is carried out by ā€œciā€ and ā€œceā€ respectively.

An easy example is represented by the number ā€œzeroā€, which in Spanish is in fact ā€œceroā€.

And if we went from Barcelona to Zaragoza? From the pronunciation point of view nothing changes, while geographically speaking it is a whole different story.
Ā 

1.12. How to best pronounce the other letters, like true Spaniards!

The letters that you do not find in this chapter are pronounced exa...

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