A Spanish Learning Grammar
eBook - ePub

A Spanish Learning Grammar

Mike Thacker, Pilar Munoz

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eBook - ePub

A Spanish Learning Grammar

Mike Thacker, Pilar Munoz

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Über dieses Buch

A Spanish Learning Grammar, Third Edition, is an innovative reference grammar and workbook suitable for you, whether you are studying Spanish at intermediate or advanced level.

Its straightforward explanations of grammar are supported by examples with contemporary vocabulary, humorous cartoon drawings, and plentiful, varied exercises, helping you to grasp often complex points of grammar in an enjoyable way.

Its carefully devised two-part structure mirrors the learning process, allowing you to focus on core knowledge first and enabling you to progress confidently to more advanced knowledge at your own pace.

Key features for this third edition include:

  • New drawings which illustrate grammar through real-life scenarios
  • New vocabulary bringing you up-to-date with Spanish in the digital age
  • Re-ordering of the section on verbs, making the tenses easier for you to find
  • Online interactive exercises with audio answers, providing you with invaluable listening and pronunciation practice.

To aid your understanding, this third edition also contains a glossary of grammatical terms, useful verb tables and a key to the exercises.

Written in the belief that grammar is the key to real communication, this is an essential textbook for any student of Spanish.

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Information

Verlag
Routledge
Jahr
2013
ISBN
9781134654505
Auflage
3
Thema
Idiomas

Part I

Core Knowledge

1

Pronunciation, accents, spelling and punctuation

1.1 The Spanish alphabet

Symbol Symbol Symbol
a a j jota r erre
b be k ka s ese
c ce l ele t te
d de m eme u u
e e n ene v uve
f efe ñ eñe w uve doble
g ge o o x equis
h hache p pe y i griega/ye
i i q cu z zeta
Note: Letters of the alphabet (las letras del abecedario) are feminine:
ñ
In Spanish ñ is a separate letter of the alphabet. In dictionaries niñez comes after ninguno.
k and w
Very few words contain k and w. Most of them are imported from other languages, e.g. karate, whisky.

1.2 Pronunciation

Consonants

Some consonants are pronounced in a markedly different way from their equivalent in English. The most important of these differences are as follows:
images
b and v have the same sound:
buenobarbavinovarios
images
c
aBefore a, o and u: c is a hard sound (as in ‘come’):
campoarrancacostebancoCubacuando
bBefore e and i: c is a soft sound
In Castilian Spanish (spoken mainly in the north and the centre of Spain) this sound is like English ‘th’ in ‘thin’. In much of Spain and Spanish America the sound is ‘s’:
cenaacentocineincidente
images
g
aBefore a, o and u: g is a hard sound (as in ‘go’):
garajeganargordogolgustogusano
bBefore e or i: g is a sound made in the throat, like ch in Scottish ‘loch’:
gentegerentegirogitanodirige
cgu followed by a is pronounced ‘gw’ (as in ‘Gwen’):
guapoaguaguardar
dgu followed by e or i is a hard sound (as in ‘go’); u is silent:
guerralleguéguitarraMiguel
eIn the combinations gĂŒe and gĂŒi a diaeresis is placed over the u. This indicates that the sound is ‘gw’ (as in ‘Gwen’):
averigĂŒĂ©vergĂŒenzaargĂŒir
images
h
h is always silent: hombre is pronounced ‘ombre’, hotel ‘otel’, etc.:
images
j
j is a sound made in the throat, like ch in Scottish ‘loch’:
hijojardĂ­nJorgepajaMĂ©jico
images
ll
ll is pronounced like lli in ‘pillion’:
llavecallellegarhallar
images
r
aA single r at the beginning of a word is normally ‘trilled’ or ‘rolled’, e.g. the r in el río. Otherwise it is a single trill or ‘flap’, as in cara.
br r, as in burro, sierra, is not considered to be a separate letter. It cannot be split to form part of two different syllables. It is always a rolled sound, like a ‘Scottish’ r. The difference between these two sounds can be heard clearly when comparing pero (but) and perro (dog).
images
x
x is pronounced
abetween vowels: can be either ‘ks’ (as in ‘expect’) or ‘gs’ (as in ‘example’):
elixirexistiréxito
or
bbefore a consonant: ‘ks’ or, more usually, ‘s’:
exceptoexclamarexperiencia
images
z
In Castilian Spanish (spoken mainly in the north and centre of Spain) this sound is pronounced like ‘th’ in ‘thin’. In much of Spain and Spanish America the sound is ‘s’:
zona zigzag zozobra

Vowels

The five vowels are a, e, i, o and u. Wherever a vowel appears in a word it has the same sound value, unlike in English, where the sa...

Inhaltsverzeichnis