Table 1.1 continuedLetter
Name
Pronunciation
Examples
rere
between vowels or after
b,
c,
d,
g,
p,
t
- a single tap of the tongue
caro
, embrollo
, agrio
,
at the front of the mouth, as in Scottish
pearl
potro
at the beginning of words and after
lor
n
- a trill or roll of the tongue
rojo
, alrededor
, Enrique
rr
erre
a trill or roll of the tongue
carro
when a prefix ending in a vowel is added to a word beginning with
para
+
rayos
>
r, the
r
>
rr
pararrayos
care should be taken to distinguish between words such as
pero
‘but’ and
perro
‘dog’
sese
generally as in
sit
rather than
rose
sesenta
tte
similar to English, but less aspirated
tetera
like Spanish
d, pronounced with the tongue against the top teeth and
not the ridge above them, cf. English
total
and Spanish
total
uu
like
oo
, as in English
plume
and never
cube
; a single sound
pluma
, fuma
, cubo
vuve
pronounced exactly like Spanish
b, e.g.
tubo
and
tuvo
, cabo
and
cavo
sound the same; never
vin English
very
strongest after a pause, and after
n
vino
, enviar
, ¡Vale!
weaker between vowels
cava
, bravo
wuve
rare, only in borrowed words, usually as in
wood
whisky
, windsurf
doble
occasionally as
v/
b
wáter
x
equis
between vowels: as in
axis
taxi
, éxito