Spanish Vowels The first five lessons cover the vowels. In Spanish, the vowels have only one sound each. That’s one of the reasons that Spanish words are spelled exactly how they sound. Here’s an interesting fact: It only takes Spanish-speaking children about a year to master spelling. ...
Learn about Spanish vowels. Discover how to pronounce each vowel in Spanish. Explore example sentences and words to learn and practice Spanish...
A key ingredient to both speaking and understanding Spanish is pronunciation. This lesson will introduce the Spanish consonants and the sound that each one makes. Another video will present the vowels, and then you can put them all together. A reminder that, just like in English, there are a...
Use these Spanish audio resources, pronunciation tips, and conversation exercises to learn how to speak Spanish like a native.
The pronunciation of Spanish vowels is very simple - each vowel can be pronounced only one way (except when it's part of a diphthong).
Vowels First, we’ll start with the easiest bit (don’t worry, none of it is that difficult!). Vowels in Spanish always sound the same, whatever their context. They are pronounced as follows. LetterPronounciationExample aLike the a in father, but shortergracias ...
We hired professional voice-over artists to record the correct pronunciation of the most popular Spanish words. The number of the audio recordings is indicated in the following table. Click the buttons to listen to the sample words.Number of audio recordings in our Spanish pronunciation generator...
English Pronunciation for Speakers of Spanish (From Theory to Practice) || 3. Vowels and Vowel Glidesdoi:10.1515/9781501510977-009Gómez González, María de los ángelesSánchez Roura, Teresa
Were your vowels stuck playing second fiddle? Now, try saying it with a Spanish pronunciation (i.e., with emphasis on the vowels): con-fig-ur-able.Your browser does not support the audio element. In Spanish, each vowel correlates to exactly one vowel sound, which are as follows: a ...
Vowels a/o/u vs. e/i affect the pronunciation/spelling of preceding consonants c/g [cine/'cinema' vs. carro/'car', and gitano/'gypsy' vs. gasolina/'gasoline']. To conserve a hard c and g, spelling changes to qu and gu, respectively as in [tocar = 'play (music)' Toqué la...