How To Speak the Vowels in Spanish

How To Speak the Vowels in Spanish…and More…
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You probably want to talk Spanish even more than to read it at this point, but right from the beginning you can take advantage of the Spanish alphabet to cue pronunciation. The Spanish alphabet is one of the world’s best representations of a spoken language. Once you get used to the sound values for the letters you can forget about most of those distracting and strange-looking pronunciation guides you may have seen in other materials:

gracias, say “grah-see-ahs” (this is not only distracting, it’s inaccurate)

Also, you will want to practice some of those similarities and differences between English and Spanish sounds that will tend to carry over from your English speech habits when you are trying to form new Spanish speech habits. At first you will have to pay close attention to the models, trying to mimic them, and practice, practice, practice.

Pronunciation, after all, is the result of habitual physical articulation (voice and mouth movements). Habits that are repeated daily usually become well entrenched after about a month of practice.

Spanish Vowel Sound Formation

Spanish is a musical, sonorant language. It sounds that way to us partly because of its system of five cardinal vowels, almost like operatic singing vowels.

  • The lowest vowel–most open in the mouth, with the tongue in the lowest position–is ‘a’. It is written with the letter “a” (yes, say “ah” — but short and crisp).
  • Raise the tongue to mid-position, close the jaw a bit, and sing ‘e’ (like the vowel in the English “bait”, but don’t trail off into the y-sounding off-glide).
  • Raise the jaw a bit more and also the tongue, spread the lips a bit more, and sing ‘i’ (yes, like the vowel in English “bee”, but keep it steady and short).
  • ‘e’ and ‘i’ are the two front vowels. Now go back again to the open, low vowel ‘a’. Next, we’ll work on the two rounded back vowels.
  • From ‘a’, round the lips, raise the tongue a bit, and sound ‘o’ (as in English “boat”, but don’t trail off into a “w” off-glide).
  • For ‘u’, again round the lips, raise the tongue more, and close the jaw a bit more (like English “boo”, but again guard against the wuh-ish off-glide).

That’s it. You may be helped to remember the five-vowel system by keeping in mind a triangle that represents vowel tongue height, jaw openness and spreading or rounding of the lips:

Spanish Vowels: Articulation Chart

Sound Front 1 Central 3 Back 2
High i u
Mid e o
Low a

1 The front vowels are accompanied by lip spreading.
2 The back vowels are accompanied by lip rounding.
3 The central vowel [a] is neutral, similar to the mouth formation of “o” in English “pot”.

If you’d like to see and hear the Spanish vowels, watch this video: Learn Spanish Vowels Video.

Here is an amusing chant that has been used in some Spanish speaking countries by children learning the vowel letters and sounds. Try it, concentrating on the vowel and the word at the end of each line.

A.   El burro se va. — A.   The burro is leaving.
E.   El burro se fue. — E.   The burro has gone.
I.   El burro está aquí. — I.   The burro is right here.
O.   El burro soy yo. — O.   I'm the burro.
U.   El burro eres tú. — U.   You're the burro.

‘Burro’ is a good-natured reference to thick-headedness. Say this ditty over and over until you have banished all Englishy sound attachments to these letters.

The next lesson will deal with consonants, and putting together syllables, words and phrases.

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Pointing Something Out in Spanish

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Pointing something out in Spanish: is it aquí, ahí, allí, acá or allá?

These five locational adverbs are used frequently in speech, less so in written text unless it is representing dialogue. This is for good reason, because these words are deictics, or pointer terms. They need context to be fully interpretable. The nearness or farness and the degree of indeterminacy associated with the position of an object depends on a point of reference, usually the speaker.

Something near the speaker can be:

  • aquí, if it is ‘right here’, or
  • acá, if it is ‘around here’.

Aquí están mis llaves. — Here are my keys. (I'm looking at them)
Pongan acá el sofá. — Put the sofa over here.

If you were talking to the movers you could then say:

Más acá, por favor. — A little closer please.

…but you could never say más aquí because it’s impossible to get more “here” than “right here”.

Something farther away from the speaker can be:

  • ahí or allí, if it is ‘right there’ or
  • allá, if it is ‘around there’.

But what about differentiating ahí and allí? For some speakers they seem interchangeable. Some speakers have only one term, understandable in regions where -ll- is pronounced [y] so that ahí and allí sound alike. (Remember: the letter h is always silent). For others, ahí may tend toward a metaphorical usage:

Ahí está la dificultad. — There's the problem.
De ahí se sabe quién es responsable. — From that you know who is responsible / That's how you know who is responsible.

¡Ahí está! That’s it!

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Days and Months in Spanish

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Skip the reading and go straight to the Days and Months in Spanish Video. Although, I’ve found that reading each Spanish lesson first, helps in understanding it all.

Here are the days of the week in Spanish (los días de la semana):

lunes — Monday
martes — Tuesday
miércoles — Wednesday
jueves — Thursday
viernes — Friday
sábado — Saturday
domingo — Sunday

All of the days of the week are masculine–el lunes, el martes, etc., so I’ve left that off the list–see my lesson on Spanish noun gender for a brief explanation. When you want to say “On Saturday…” (or any other day), ‘on’ is equal to el (or los) in Spanish. For example:

El sabado voy a la playa. — On Saturday I'm going to the beach.
Los viernes no trabajamos. — On Fridays we don't work.

Perhaps you’ve noticed already that in Spanish, the days of the week are not capitalized. Something to be aware of if you want to learn how to write Spanish (or know what you’re looking at when reading Spanish).

Here are the months of the year in Spanish (los meses del año):

enero — January
febrero — February
marzo — March
abril — April
mayo — May
junio — June
julio — July
agosto — August
septiembre — September
octubre — October
noviembre — November
diciembre — December

The names of the months in Spanish are also, not capitalized.

So, what do you say if a friend asks you:

"¿Cuándo es tu cumpleaños?" — When is your birthday?

If it’s on Tuesday, the 18th of August, you would say:

"El martes, dieciocho de agosto." — On Tuesday, the 18th of August.

Note: The literal translation for ‘eighteenth’ (18th) is decimoctava, but I don’t think ordinal numbers are used after ‘tenth’ (décimo(a)) in Spanish–a subject for another lesson.

Here are some Spanish words I’ve presented in this lesson:

(el) día — day
(la) semana — week
(el) mes — month
(el) año — year
(el) cumpleaños — birthday

Watch the Video: Days and Months in Spanish Video

Learn Spanish Days and Months Video - Click to Open


Not too difficult, is it? Well, keep practicing, and…

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