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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Variants  





2 Variation  





3 Differences from American Spanish  



3.1  Vocabulary  







4 References  





5 Bibliography  





6 External links  














Peninsular Spanish






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Peninsular Spanish
Spanish of Spain
Iberian Spanish
European Spanish
español peninsular
A bus in front of a bus station.
Dialects of peninsular Spanish and other languages of Spain
Native toSpain
RegionPeninsular Spain
EthnicitySpaniards

Native speakers

(undated figure of 47 million[citation needed])

Language family

Italic

Early forms

Proto-Indo-European

Dialects

Writing system

  • Spanish Braille
  • Official status

    Official language in

    Spain Spain
    Regulated byReal Academia Española
    Language codes
    ISO 639-3
    Glottologcast1244
    IETFes-ES

    Dialectical continuum of Iberian Romance languages including European Spanish and its dialects.[image reference needed]

    Peninsular Spanish (Spanish: español peninsular), also known as the Spanish of Spain (Spanish: español de España), European Spanish (Spanish: español europeo), or Iberian Spanish (Spanish: español ibérico), is the set of varieties of the Spanish language spoken in Peninsular Spain. This construct is often framed in opposition to varieties from the Americas.

    From a phonological standpoint, there is a north-south gradient contrasting conservative and innovative pronunciation patterns. The former generally retain features such as /s//θ/ distinction and realization of intervocalic /d/, whilst the latter may not. Processes of interaction and levelling between standard (a construct popularly perceived as based on northern dialects) and nonstandard varieties however involve ongoing adoption of conservative traits south and innovative ones north.[3] In line with Spanish language's rich consonant fluctuation, other internal variation within varieties of Peninsular Spanish is represented by phenomena such as weakening of coda position -/s/, the defricativization of /tʃ/, realizations of /x/ as [x] and [h] and weakening or change of liquid consonants /l/ and /r/.[4]

    Morphologically, a notable feature in most varieties of Peninsular Spanish setting them apart from varieties from the Americas is the use of the pronoun vosotros (along with its oblique form os) and its corresponding verb forms for the second person plural familiar.

    Language contact of Spanish with Catalan, Basque and Galician in the autonomous communities in which the latter languages are spoken notoriously involve borrowings at the lexical level, but also in the rest of the linguistic structure.[5]

    Variants[edit]

    Variation in Peninsular Spanish, especially phonetic, largely follows a north-south axis, often imagined or characterized as Castilian versus Andalusian in the popular imagination. That said, different isoglosses intersect and never exactly coincide with regional borders.[6][7] The Spanish dialects of bilingual regions, such as Castrapo in Galicia or Catalan Spanish, have their own features due to language contact.

    A simple, north-south division is:[7]

    Another north-south division would include a central-northern, found north of Madrid and equated with Castilian Spanish, a southern or Andalusian dialect, and an intermediary zone. This division does not include the Spanish of bilingual regions.[8]

    While a more narrow division includes the following dialect regions:[6]

    The related term Castilian Spanish is often applied to formal varieties of Spanish as spoken in Spain.[9][10]

    According to folk tradition, the "purest" form of Peninsular Spanish is spoken in Valladolid, although the concept of "pure" languages has been rejected by modern linguists.[11][12]

    Variation[edit]

    Dialectal variation in the Peninsula follows both north-south and east-west axes.[13]

    Leísmo is native to a large swath of western Castile, as well as Cantabria and neighboring parts of Leon and Extremadura.[14]

    In much of eastern Castile, as well as Navarre, Aragon and Álava, the clitic pronoun se can express plural number, becoming sen, when it follows an infinitive, gerund, or subjunctive form used to express a command, as in casarsen 'to get married', siéntensen 'sit down'.[15]

    In an area of northern Spain, centered on Burgos, La Rioja, Álava and Vizcaya and also including Guipúzcoa, Navarra, Cantabria and Palencia, the imperfect subjunctive forms tend to be replaced by conditional ones.[16]

    In rural Aragon and Navarre, the cluster /tɾ/ is often realized as a voiceless alveolar non-sibilant affricate [tɹ̝̊], not unlike the initial consonant cluster in the English word trick. Similarly, the trilled /r/ may also be assibilated to [ɹ̝] in this region. The same pronunciations are also found in much of Latin America, especially Mexico, Central America, and the Andes.[17]

    In a chunk of northwestern Spain which includes Galicia and Bilbao and excludes Barcelona, Madrid, and Seville, the sequence /tl/ in words such as atleta 'athlete' and Atlántico 'Atlantic' is treated as an onset cluster, with both consonants being part of the same syllable. The same is true in the Canary Islands and most of Latin America, with the exception of Puerto Rico. On the other hand, in most of Peninsular Spanish, each consonant in /tl/ is considered as belonging to a separate syllable, and as a result the /t/ is subject to weakening. Thus, [aðˈlantiko], [aðˈleta] are the resulting pronunciations.[18][19]

    Differences from American Spanish[edit]

    The Spanish language is a pluricentric language. Spanish is spoken in numerous countries around the world, each with differing standards. However, the Real Academia Española (Royal Spanish Academy), based in Madrid, Spain, is affiliated with the national language academies of 22 other hispanophone nations through the Association of Academies of the Spanish Language, and their coordinated resolutions are typically accepted in other countries, especially those related to spelling. Also, the Instituto Cervantes, an agency of the Government of Spain in charge of promoting the Spanish language abroad, has been adopted by other countries as the authority to officially recognize and certify the Spanish level of non-native Spanish speakers as their second language, as happens in Australia, South Korea or Switzerland. [citation needed]

    The variants of Spanish spoken in Spain and its former colonies vary significantly in grammar and pronunciation, as well as in the use of idioms. Courses of Spanish as a second language commonly use Mexican Spanish in the United States and Canada, whereas European Spanish is typically preferred in Europe.

    Dialects in central and northern Spain and Latin American Spanish contain several differences, the most apparent being Distinción (distinction), i.e., the pronunciation of the letter z before all vowels, and of c before e and i, as a voiceless dental fricative /θ/, as in English thinthing. Thus, in most varieties of Spanish from Spain, cinco, 'five' is pronounced /ˈθinko/ as opposed to /ˈsinko/ in Latin American Spanish, and similarly for zapato, 'shoe', cerdo, 'pig', zorro, 'fox', Zurbarán. A restricted form of distinción also occurs in the area around Cusco, Peru, where [θ] exists in words such as the numbers doce, 'twelve', and trece, 'thirteen'.[20]

    Additionally, all Latin American dialects drop the familiar (that is, informal) vosotros verb forms for the second person plural, using ustedes in all contexts. In most of Spain, ustedes is used only in a formal context.

    Some other minor differences are:

    Vocabulary[edit]

    The meaning of certain words may differ greatly between all the dialects of the language: carro refers to car in some Latin American dialects but to cart in Spain and some Latin American dialects. There also appear gender differences: el PC ('personal computer') in Castilian Spanish and some Latin American Spanish, la PC in some Hispanic American Spanish, due to the widespread use of the gallicism ordenador (from ordinateur in French) for computer in Peninsular Spanish, which is masculine, instead of the Hispanic-American-preferred computadora, which is feminine, from the English word 'computer' (the exceptions being Colombia and Chile, where PC is known as computador, which is masculine).

    Speakers from Latin America tend to use words and polite-set expressions that, even if recognized by the Real Academia Española, are not widely used nowadays (some of them are even deemed as anachronisms) by speakers of Castilian Spanish. For example, enojarse and enfadarse are verbs with the same meaning (to become angry), enojarse being used much more in the Americas than in Spain, and enfadarse more in Spain than in the Americas. Below are select vocabulary differences between Spain and other Spanish-speaking countries. Words in bold are unique to Spain and not used in any other country (except for perhaps Equatorial Guinea which speaks a very closely related dialect, and to a lesser extent the Philippines).

    Selected vocabulary differences
    Iberian Spanish Latin American Spanish[N 1] English
    vale bien (universal), listo (Colombia), dale (Argentina) ya (Chile), (Peru) okay
    gafas anteojos/lentes eyeglasses/spectacles
    patata papa potato (papa also means poppet or child)
    judía, alubia frijol/frejol/caraota (Venezuela) / habichuela (Caribbean) / poroto bean
    jersey/chaleco suéter/saco/pulóver sweater
    coche auto/carro car
    conducir manejar to drive
    aparcar estacionar/parquear to park
    fregona trapeador, trapero, lampazo (Argentina, Uruguay), mopa, mapo (Puerto Rico) mop
    tarta torta/pastel (Mexico, El Salvador) / queque/bizcocho (Puerto Rico) cake
    ordenador computadora/computador computer
    zumo jugo juice
    chulo/guay chévere/chido/piola/copado/bacán/bacano cool (slang)
    cabezal cabeza head (of an apparatus)
    1. ^ Latin American Spanish consists of several varieties spoken throughout the Americas so the examples may not represent all dialects. They are meant to show contrast and comparing all variants of Latin America as a whole to one variant of Spain would be impossible as the majority of the vocabulary will be reflected in other variants.

    References[edit]

    1. ^ SpanishatEthnologue (25th ed., 2022) Closed access icon
  • ^ Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin; Bank, Sebastian, eds. (2022). "Castilic". Glottolog 4.6. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
  • ^ Hernández Campoy, Juan Manuel; Villena Ponsoda, Juan Andrés (2009). "Standardness and nonstandardness in Spain: dialect attrition and revitalization of regional dialects of Spanish". International Journal of the Sociology of Language. 196–197 (196–197): 185–186. doi:10.1515/IJSL.2009.021. S2CID 145000590. Archived from the original on 24 January 2022. Retrieved 24 January 2022.
  • ^ Samper Padilla, José Antonio (2022). "Phonological Variation and Change in European Spanish". Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Linguistics. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199384655.013.493. ISBN 978-0-19-938465-5.
  • ^ Pusch, Claus; Kabatek, Johannes (2011). "Language contact in Southwestern Europe". In Kortmann, Bernd; van der Auwera, Johan (eds.). The languages and linguistics of Europe : a comprehensive guide. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 400–401. ISBN 978-3-11-022025-4.
  • ^ a b Lipski, John (2012). "Geographical and Social Varieties of Spanish: An Overview" (PDF). In Hualde, José Ignacio; Olarrea, Antxon; O'Rourke, Erin (eds.). The Handbook of Hispanic Linguistics. Blackwell Publishing Ltd. pp. 1–26. doi:10.1002/9781118228098.ch1. ISBN 9781405198820.
  • ^ a b Lipski, John M. (2018). "Dialects of Spanish and Portuguese" (PDF). In Boberg, Charles; Nerbonne, John; Watt, Dominic (eds.). The handbook of dialectology. Hoboken, NJ. pp. 498–509. doi:10.1002/9781118827628.ch30. ISBN 9781118827550.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • ^ Hualde, José Ignacio; Olarrea, Antxon; Escobar, Anna María; Travis, Catherine E.; Sanz, Cristina (2021). "Variación lingüística en español". Introducción a la lingüística hispánica (in Spanish) (3rd ed.). Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. pp. 380–432. ISBN 9781108770293.
  • ^ "Castilian Spanish". ncl.ac.uk. Retrieved 23 May 2015.
  • ^ "Castilian". Webcitation.org. Archived from the original on November 9, 2009. Retrieved 2015-08-11.
  • ^ MARCOS, JAVIER RODRÍGUEZ (2011-12-15). ""En ningún sitio se habla el mejor español del mundo"". El País (in Spanish). ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved 2019-04-01.
  • ^ "Lingüista sostiene que no hablan mejor español en Valladolid que en Medellín". La Vanguardia (in Spanish). 2016-09-03. Retrieved 2019-04-01.
  • ^ Fernández-Ordóñez 2016, p. 387.
  • ^ Fernández-Ordóñez 2016, pp. 388–390.
  • ^ Fernández-Ordóñez 2016, pp. 390–391.
  • ^ Fernández-Ordóñez 2016, pp. 392–393.
  • ^ Penny 2000, p. 157.
  • ^ a b "División silábica y ortográfica de palabras con «tl»". Real Académia Española (in Spanish). Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  • ^ a b Hualde, José Ignacio; Carrasco, Patricio (2009). "/tl/ en español mexicano. ¿Un segmento o dos?" (PDF). Estudios de Fonética Experimental (in Spanish). XVIII: 175–191. ISSN 1575-5533.
  • ^ Alonso, Amado (1967). De la pronunciación medieval a la moderna en español (in Spanish)., cited in Cotton, Eleanor Greet; Sharp, John (1988), Spanish in the Americas, Georgetown University Press, ISBN 978-0-87840-094-2
  • ^ Soler-Espiauba, Dolores (1994). "¿Tú o usted? ¿Cuándo y por qué? Descodificación al uso del estudiante de español como lengua extranjera" ['Tú' or 'usted'? When and why? Decoding for the use of the student of Spanish as a foreign language] (PDF). Actas (in Spanish) (V). ASELE: 199–208. Retrieved 17 September 2020.
  • Bibliography[edit]

    External links[edit]


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