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K.T.
How should I pronounce D in Spanish?
If D is put on head of vocabularies or is put after N and L, should it sound [d] (in English) like "donde"? If D is put among vowels, should it sound like [ð] like "adios"?
Gracias!
21 apr 2015 18:28
Risposte · 9
2
After the pause, nasal or lateral --> d
[d]ame eso! con [d]aniel, caldo
In other cases:
- fricative [ð] --> a [ð]aniel, es [ð]e aquí ; it's more relaxed than d
- between the vowels sounds even more relaxed then in case before, like you said in "adiós"
- elision if preceded by accentuated vowel or at the end of the word --> cansaØo, saluØ
- th like in English [θ] at the end of the word --> Madri[θ]
21 aprile 2015
2
Actually when I say something like "aldea" I pronounce it in a soft way. It also depends where people are from, I guess. I'm from south Spain, and we have a very "relaxed" way of speaking, a bit lazy, I would say. Friends of mine from central or north Spain would pronounce Aldea with a stronger D.
In words with D at the end, I don't even pronounce it: Madrid becomes Madri, cansado becomes "cansao" , but this is just my accent, or the accent from Andalusia. We never write this way, by the way; it's only spoken dialect.
I hope you enjoyed some southern Spain culture :). Buena suerte
22 aprile 2015
I think it depends of the country. Here in Mexico, "D" always sounds like a "D". All the vowels and consonants always sound like they supposed to be except for "X" and "H".
I know "C" in Spain is pronounced like a soft "D", something between "D" and "C"/"S"
In some countries of Central America the "D" is not pronounced. For example in "salado", they say: "salao"
23 aprile 2015
For native speakers, does "D" always sound the same? :p
22 aprile 2015
Correct!
21 aprile 2015
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K.T.
Competenze linguistiche
Cinese (mandarino), Cinese (taiwanese), Inglese, Russo, Spagnolo
Lingua di apprendimento
Russo, Spagnolo
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