¡bienvenidos a semana 2!
TRANSCRIPT
¡Bienvenidos a Semana 2!
• Repasar los ejercicios de hoy
• Practicar en los grupos pequeños
• Introducir los ejercicios de la próxima semana
Agenda de hoy
!No lo olvide! Please Rename Yourself
This will open a participant list in a new window
Hover over your name, and click “More-Rename”
2
• Try a Spanish name• Ask your facilitator for assistance
• Indicate “Beginner” or “Advanced”• Necessary to place participants in the appropriate small
group session
• Add B or A after your name:
Juan BMaria APedro AAna B
Sara y Pablo B
Suzy FLucía F Note: Facilitators use F after name
!No lo olvide! Please Rename Yourself
Vamos a Hablar Español: Semana 2
Ejercicio 1: Consonantes y Acento
Las Consonantes:In the first video:
B/V C G LL/Y
Also Important:
H J Ñ S/Z
Las Consonantes: B/V C G LL/Y
B/V
C
G
LL/Y
B is the same in both English and SpanishV is more clipped and sometimes sounds like B in English
Pronounced like an English K before A, O, UPronounced like an English S before E, IFor a K sound with E or I, use QU
Bajo, Beso, Bicho, Bote, BúhoVaca, Verde, Viaje, Voz, Vuelo
Camino, Cobre, CubaCena, Cielo¿Qué?, Quizás
Pronounced like an English G before A, O, UPronounced like an English H before E, INever a J sound, like Gentle or GiantFor a hard G sound with E or I, use GU
Gato, Gota, GustoGeneral, Gigante
Guerra, Guía
Both pronounced the sameVaries from Y as in Yellow to J as in Just
Llave, Llegada, Allí, Lloro, LluviaYa, Yema, Yo, Yunque
Las Consonantes: H J Ñ S/Z
H
J
Ñ
S/Z
No sound!
Pronounced like an English HNever pronounced like an English G
Hay, Helado, Hijo, ¡Hola!, Humo
Jamón, Jefe, Jirafa, Joven, Jugo
Pronounced like Nee + Y(NeeYah, NeeYay, NeeYee, NeYoh, NeYew)
Mañana, Muñeca, Albañil, Baño, Pañuelo
Both pronounced like an English S Sabor, Semana, Simpático, Sonido, SueloZapatos, Zeta, Zorro, Zurdo
Las Consonantes:In the second video:
R RR
caro
pero
cero
carro
perro
cerro
car
dog
hill
expensive
but
zero
If you have trouble rolling your Rs, note that very few words cause confusion:
El acento en las silibas
Three rules:For words:
Ending in a vowel, n, or s
Ending in any other letter
With accent marks
Accent:
The next-to-last syllable
The last syllable
The accented syllable
Examples:
casa, pollo, elefante, imagen, hablan, tenis
verdad, animal, doctor, actriz, cantar
café, balcón, lápiz, menú, pájaro
Special Note: Words ending in “ia” and “io”With no accent mark, it is considered a single syllable:
With an accent mark, it is treated as two separate syllables:
noticia, farmacia, novio, anuncio
policía, geografía, psicología
Vamos a Hablar Español: Semana 2
Ejercicio 1: Consonantes y Acento
Pero primero...
Un poco de música
El alfabeto / El abecedario
Vamos a Hablar Español: Semana 2
Ejercicio 2: Presentarse uno mismoEjercicio 3: Presentaciones
Presentaciones:Introductions in Spanish frequently use phrasing different than English
Ejemplo:
¿Cómo se llama?
Me llamo Diego
¿A qué se dedica?
Me gusta tocar el piano
Le presento a Juan
Translated as:
What is your name?
My name is James
What do you do for a living?
I like to play the piano
I’d like to introduce Juan
Literally means:
How do you call yourself?
I call myself James
To what do you dedicate yourself?
It pleases me to play the piano
To you I present Juan
!No se preocupe – Siga la corriente!
Vamos a Hablar Español: Semana 2
Ejercicio 2: Presentarse uno mismoEjercicio 3: Presentaciones
Pero otra vez...
Una canción
José Luis Orozco canta “El barquito”
Let’s Speak Spanish
Next Week
Exercise 2: The Colors Exercise 3: Let’s Go Shopping
Exercise 1: Masculine / Feminine, Singular / Plural
¿Preguntas? ¿Comentarios?