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LEARNING
SPANISH MADE EASY
Contrary
to what others believe, Spanish sounds are really easy to pronounce.
Once you've learned a few basic rules, it will only be a short
time before you can read and speak Spanish quickly and easily.
** Do you need Spanish for practical, real world purposes, and
don't have months or years to learn? Then, this Spanish language
immersion program may be your answer. This accelerated language
immersion approach is such an effective method you will learn
3 to 5 times faster and easily remember what you've learned. **
First, know that the Spanish language has 30 letters, in contrast
with English that has only 26. The four other letters present
in the Spanish alphabet includes ch (read as che) as in chocolate,
ll (read as el-ye) as in million, ņ (read as en-ye) as in onion,
and rr (read as er-re). The common 26 letters also has Spanish
names and do not take on the ABC names of English: a, be, ce,
che, de, e, efe, ge, hache, i, jota, ka, ele, elle, eme, ene,
eņe, o, pe, ku, ere, erre, ese, te, u, uve, uve doble, ekis, y
grieyega, and zeta.
** You can use Spanish for practical, real world purposes, such
as spanish immersion programs for medical professionals who need
to easily communicate with Spanish language speakers at some very
critical times. This Spanish language immersion program
may be your answer. This accelerated language immersion approach
is such an effective method you will learn 3 to 5 times faster
and remember what you've learned. **
The Spanish language also has 5 vowels - a, e, i, o, and u. However,
what makes Spanish vowels different from English vowels is that
each of these Spanish vowels produces only one sound. In Spanish,
the vowel a is always read as in shut and never as in cat nor
tape; e is always read as in pet and never as in week; i is always
read as in hit and never as in bike; o is always read as in saw
and never as in hope; and u is always read as /oo/ in book and
never as in hut nor umbrella.
On the other hand, the letters that are pronounced the same way
as in English are b, ch, d, f, k, l, m, n, p, s, t, v, w, x, y,
and z.
The letter h is not pronounced and is always silent. The letter
r is always rolled, even more strongly when it occurs in rr. The
letter q is pronounced the same way as in the English letter k.
The letter c is pronounced in two ways: /th/ as in thin before
the vowels e and i, and /k/ elsewhere. The letter g takes the
sound of the gurgled /g/ as in the German word Bach before the
vowels e and i, and /g/ in English elsewhere. The letter j also
takes the sound of the gurgled /g/ in all conditions.
It is important to keep these rules in mind. Before you can actually
speak out Spanish words, phrases, and sentences fluently, you
have to master how to enunciate these sounds properly. Spanish
is a romantic language. Try to keep the passion and sentiment
with every sound you pronounce.
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Spanish
Immersion Programs
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