Wednesday

Why Do People Study Spanish To Get Ahead?

Articles on: Fast Learn Online Spanish, Why Is It Important To Speak Spanish, Why Do People Study Spanish

Click the link for the article containing the information YOU want to find:

Read more about Fast Learn Online Spanish...

Read more about Why Is It Important To Speak Spanish...

Read more about Why Do People Study Spanish...






Citations:

There are many examples in Spanish where the Woman would not have understood the Voice because the formal Voice would have used a verb conjugation and sentence structure that would have been unfamiliar to the Woman who only spoke in "street" Spanish.

The difference would be, in English the Woman knew what 'whom' meant, just didn't use it.

No one I know says, 'whom'!" (Street English met Formal English!)

Woman responds, a bit nervously, "I-I must have a wrong number!

Pause.

Voice responds, slowly, clearly, enunciating every word, "To whom did you wish to Speak?"

Woman says, "Hi, Martha?"

For an example, in English, consider this: A woman makes a phone call. Voice answers, "Hello".

(Subjective tenses are fairly complex and subtle, difficult to understand by English speakers since there is no direct parallel in English)

Also, all of the subjective tenses are rarely used in everyday Spanish.

For example there are entire tenses in formal Spanish that are almost never used in everyday Spanish.

It is also simpler.

You will find it to be generally more useful and usable.

For most people it is better to start with conversational street Spanish, which is the right one for daily use.

Similarly the differences between Street and Formal Spanish are much more pronounced.

The differences between Peninsular Spanish and Latin American Spanish are considerably deeper and more pronounced than are the differences between British and American English.

British vs American English and lower class working English vs university/ educated English.

Rocket Spanish, Learn Spanish Like Crazy and Fsi Spanish are stronger in everyday conversational street Spanish. We have those differences in English too.

Language teachers Pinsleur and Rosetta Stone are stronger in the Formal, university/educated Spanish.

Then within each of these categories it is divided between everyday conversational (street) Spanish and formal (Upper society parlor and intellectual/educated) Spanish.

It can be first divided into European Spanish (Castillian or Peninsular Spanish) and American Spanish (Latin American Spanish.)

The Spanish language is much less homogenous than English.

How many kinds are there?

What do you mean?

What kind of Spanish?

No comments:

Post a Comment