28 Apr
Many Americans are learning Spanish to meet both business and personal goals. If you are one of the millions of visionary Americans taking on this challenge, bravo!
In business, speaking Spanish will help you attract loyal customers and a diverse employee base. By speaking Spanish in your personal life, you will meet fascinating people from around the world– and you’ll build valuable, long-lasting friendships.
For adults learning foreign languages can be challenging. You are never too old to acquire a second language! In fact, it’s good exercise for your brain.
Prepare to be dedicated in the pursuit of your linguistic goal. After all, you didn’t learn English over night. We learn our native language through years of trial and error. Nevertheless, you can achieve good results quickly by using these ten practical tips.
1. Use the words you know. Everyone who speaks English knows more Spanish than they realize. When you are beginning to speak Spanish, it could be difficult for you to compose and say an entire sentence. That doesn’t matter. Don’t wait until you have an entire “perfect” phrase. Say the words in Spanish that you know.
When you observe native speakers, you will hear them converse in English, Spanish and even Spanglish. With language it’s never all or nothing! Say what you know, even if it’s only one word.
2. Set yourself up for success. Start with simple greetings like “hola” or “buenas tardes.” If you say please or thank you to a Spanish-speaking customer or employee and you know the words “gracias” and “por favor,” use them after you say the words in English.
Setting a positive bilingual tone for communication is always a good idea. It lets the person you are speaking with know that it’s fine with you to use both English and Spanish.
3. Expect to make some mistakes. If you had a foreign language class in high school or college, perhaps you were corrected so many times that you feel defeated before you start. We all make mistakes when we speak English, so making mistakes in speaking Spanish is normal and natural. Everyone makes mistakes– even native speakers.
4. It’s OK to feel awkward. Speaking Spanish will feel physically different to you. You might even feel like a cartoon character has taken over your speech! Speaking Spanish requires more use of your facial muscles- and then there are those “trilled” r’s. Just do your best. Your accent will develop over time. Not having the best accent will only stand in the way of your ability to communicate if you let it.
5. Being shy is normal. It takes a strong, positive personality to take the risk of speaking another language. We are all inhibited to one degree or another. We’re terrified that people will laugh at us– or even yell at us out of impatience. Smile and dive in! It’s normal to feel inhibited when you begin to speak another language.
6. Ask “yes-no” questions. As you begin to increase your skills, when asking questions pose them so that the answer will be yes or no. This will give you a head-start on understanding the rest of the answer.
7. Practice each day. Practicing just five minutes each day will make a “grande” difference in your ability. A few minutes here and a few minutes there really add up over time. When you do practice, put yourself in situations where you can use the language. Attempts at memorization are usually very ineffective.
Write the days of the week on your calendar at the office and look at them each day.
Put a sticky note on your phone and write the numbers in Spanish from zero to ten on it. Each time you dial a number, say it in Spanish.
Make index cards of the Spanish words you want to learn first, and carry them in your purse or car. Exercises like these make your practice habits practical and help you build them into your normal routine.
8. Learn practical phrases.Think critically about what you do each day and what you need to learn to function more efficiently at your workplace. Learn those words and phrases first. By learning words that are practical, you will use them more often. The more you use the words, the faster you will remember them–and add to them.
9. Don’t worry about your grammar. Remember that no one speaks perfectly. Always remember that communication is always more important than conjugation! If the individual you are speaking with understands you, that’s all that really matters. It doesn’t have to be pretty and perfect to be effective.
10. Go slowly. Learning Spanish is like eating your favorite meal. Savor the experience. Learn Spanish one word or phrase at a time. Chew it completely before going on to more material. If you learn slowly, you will remember what you have learned longer. And, that’s the whole point!
Myelita Melton
http://www.articlesbase.com/communication-articles/ten-tips-for-learning-to-speak-spanish-135734.html
9 Responses for "Ten Tips for Learning to Speak Spanish"
What are some tips for me to speak Spanish fluently?
I am 27 and speak only English. I have took two semesters of Elementary Spanish in college. My teacher was from Spain and the Spanish was so different that the FEW WORDS/VERBS I did retain I really cannot use.
I have the strongest desire EVER to learn Spanish and become bilingual. What are some tips? Is the Rosetta Stone software worth $500?!
Any help and/or guidance would be greatly appreciated. I am very afraid that I will not be able to learn it or retain anything :0(
Your best bet, first of all, is to finish getting the basics. If you haven’t had four semesters of college, you won’t have the base of knowledge that you need to get there. Rosetta Stone can help, I think, but I’m not familiar with the program. My experience with that type of program…tapes, cds, whatever, is that they teach you phrases. They don’t teach you how to form your own thoughts into cohesive sentences, but I have heard that Rosetta is better than most.
How about this? Rather than going out and spending the 500 or more on it, try going to the library and see if they have a copy you can borrow and see if it works for you.
Alternatively, you could try the local community college for a couple of inexpensive (albeit time consuming) courses. I understand your interest in trying to make it fit into YOUR schedule, rather than the other way around.
Another way to get the basics down is livemocha.com. With it, you can take the lessons, and practice with real natives, and, for Spanish, with English speakers who are fluent.
Once you have learned the basics, you need to GO to a country where Spanish is the native tongue, and live there for at LEAST four months, if at all possible, better for a full year, in order to cement and really become fluent.
Then you need to keep it up.
It’s tough, but totally worth it!
And, just out of curiosity, what verbs/words can’t you use? do you mean, you really can’t form sentences? or that you find them to be bad words?
References :
SPEND A MONTH IN ARGENTINA OR ANY PLACE IN SOUTH AMERICA
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I can help you, I really like teaching what I know (I speak English and Spanish) and what a best way to learn a language than practicing it (chatting on the msn or talking).
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watch spanish tv. Use close captions. Also read it and try to learn some pronunciation rules such as:
the E at the end is NOT silent! sounds like the first E in Elephant. Example: Nueve (nine)
the H is silent. Example: Hotel sounds like otel.
the J sounds like H. Example: Juan sounds like huan.
the letter “ñ” sounds like when you are saying lasagna (the gn combination) Example: Niña.
Hope this helps a little bit
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Native spanish speaker
Try this website:
http://www.mansionspanish.com
.
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Rosetta Stone is a visual program, so you have to be sitting at a computer to use it. Pimsleur is a listen and respond type of audio program, so you can listen to it anywhere. It’s expensive too, but the library might have it. My wife is studying Spanish and has tried everything. She’s done a blog on it (not selling anything — just a blog) if you want to read about her experiences with books, cds, classes, immersion, etc. It’s http://learningspanishanywayican.blogspot.com if you’re interested. Good luck. (I got bored with Rosetta Stone)
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First of all, I vote for Sue’s answer above. I think it makes a lot of sense. One thing I would suggest is that there are flexible online programs that include a real live human teacher in private classes.
If the goal is flexible flexible flexible, and you still want it to be a good quality service, you should check them out. One option is http://www.lejoslearning.com.
But pay a lot of attention to Sue’s answer. It makes a lot of sense. Use all of the resources you can get your hands on.
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I seriously consider that since you are already a grown-up and it is a well-known fact that one’s brain is less likely to, say, learn a new language, the best option is to GO AND LIVE for a while in a spanish speaking country.
BUT I must say that there are a few places which one should avoid:
I seriously think that the worst idea in the world is to go to Argentina to learn Spanish. Mainly, because they have their own orthographic rules and their own way for conjugating verbs (in the imperative mood for instance, they say things like “jugá” instead of “juega”, etc), not to mention the fact that their accent is hideous (it is a fact that other spanish-speaking countries despise it).
Spain is not a good option either (as an interesting fact: I don’t know if you are aware of this, but Spanish is not the only language spoken in Spain. Spanish or “castellano” which is the proper name, comes from a specific Spanish region, “Castilla”). Spanish people lisp A LOT and the rest cannot understand them. This is a FACT. They use conjugations which are outdated for the rest of the Spanish-speaking world (for instance jugais instead of juegan), and they have lots of slang we don’t understand.
Cuba (despite its hideous political situation) is a good place to learn spanish. Most of the other countries in central america are not a good idea since they have strong accents and are too Americanized, in most of them people tend to speak Spanglish.
Mexico is a great place to learn spanish. We all know how they speak and are familiar with their terms (mainly bc every TV series is dubbed by Mexicans).
I think Peru is probably the GREATEST place to learn spanish. They don’t have a strong accent and they don’t have too much slang.
I am from Chile, which is also a spanish-speaking country. We don’t have a strong accent but I wouldn’t reccomend your coming here to learn spanish because we speak too fast and we have too much slang.
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I am a native spanish speaker and a linguistics major
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