| SPANISH LANGUAGE
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SOME FACTS
Spanish language, member of the Romance
group of the Italic subfamily of the Indo-European
family of languages. The official language
of Spain and 19 Latin American nations,
Spanish is spoken as a first language by
about 330 million persons and as a second
language by perhaps another 50 million.
It is the mother tongue of about 40 million
people in Spain, where the language originated
and whence it was later brought by Spanish
explorers, colonists, and empire-builders
to the Western Hemisphere and other parts
of the world during the last five centuries.
It is the native language of over 17 million
people in the United States, and is one
of the official languages of the United
Nations.
Spanish is a descendant of the Vulgar Latin
brought to the Iberian peninsula by the
soldiers and colonists of ancient Rome (see
Latin language). Thus the Spanish vocabulary
is basically of Latin origin, although it
has been enriched by many loan words from
other languages, especially Arabic, French,
Italian, and various indigenous languages
of North, Central, and South America. The
oldest extant written records of Spanish
date from the middle of the 10th cent. A.D.
The Spanish language employs the Roman
alphabet, to which the symbols ch, ll, n,
and rr have been added. The tilde placed
over the n (n) indicates the pronunciation
ni, as in English pinion. The acute accent
is used to make clear which syllable of
a word is to be stressed when the regular
rules of stress are not followed. The acute
accent is also employed to distinguish between
homonyms, as in se (“I know”)
and se (“self”).
There are a number of Spanish dialects;
however, the Castilian dialect was already
the accepted standard of the language by
the middle of the 13th cent., largely owing
to the political importance of Castile.
There are several striking differences in
pronunciation between Castilian and major
dialects of Latin American Spanish. In the
former, c before e and i, and z before a,
o, and u, are pronounced th, as in English
think; in the latter, they are sounded as
s in English see. Moreover, the alphabetical
symbol ll in Castilian is pronounced as
lli in English billion; but in Latin American
Spanish, as y in English you. On the whole,
however, the differences between the Spanish
dialects of Europe and of Latin America
with reference to pronunciation, vocabulary,
and grammar are relatively minor.
One interesting feature of Spanish is that
there are two forms of the verb “to
be”: estar, which denotes a relatively
temporary state, and ser, which denotes
a relatively permanent condition and which
is also used before a predicate noun. Reflexive
verbs often perform the same function in
Spanish that passive verbs do in English.
Because the inflection of the Spanish verb
indicates person very clearly, subject pronouns
are not necessary. A another peculiarity
of Spanish is the use of an inverted question
mark (?) at the beginning of a question
and of an inverted exclamation point (?)
at the beginning of an exclamation.
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