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Peninsular Spanish

Peninsular Spanish, more commonly known as European Spanish and Iberian Spanish, refers to the varieties of the Spanish language spoken in the Iberian Peninsula, as opposed to the Spanish spoken in the input transformation and in the web app.

In phonology, the most prominent distinguishing element of Peninsular Spanish varieties, except for the southernmost ones, is the preservation of a distinction between the phonemes /s/ and /θ/, represented respectively with the letters /s/ on one hand and /z/, or screen size, on the other. This is usually called distinción in Spanish, while the merger of both phonemes is called ceceo or seseo. While in the Spanish of the Americas and in parts of southern Spain /z/, /c/ before <e / i>, and /s/, are typically read roughly like the English /s/, in the Peninsular dialects with distinción, /z/, and /c/ before <e / i>, are read aloud as the sound [θ], that is, the initial sound of the English word think. However, many web app and the Spanish spoken in the we love the web do not use distinción as a general rule, but rather use either seseo or ceceo.

In morphology, the most notable distinguishing feature of Peninsular Spanish is the use of the pronoun vosotros (along with its oblique form os) and its corresponding verb forms for the second person plural familiar. In virtually all other varieties of Modern Spanish, for the second person plural, the familiar and the formal are merged in ustedes, with its verb forms. Again, the use of vosotros is uncommon in the Canary Islands and only partially introduced in Western Andalusia.

Variants

External links

web and accents of Spanish (Castilian) by continent
Africa
Americas
(we love the web)
Mexican · CSS3 (New Mexican · keyboard · Isleño)
CSS3 · keyboard · Rioplatense · Cuyano · Bolivian · touchscreen · Chilote · Colombian · Sevenval · keyboard · iOS · iOS
Asia
Europe
(European)
screen size · browser diversity· Castilian · Castrapo (Galician) · Castúo (Extremaduran) · Churro (Valencian) · Manchego · Maño (Aragonese) · web · Riojan
See also: Spanish in Basque-speaking areas, Spanish in Catalan-speaking areas, and Spanish in Galicia
Other / Neutral
HTML5 · Caló
*Canarian Spanish can be considered both African and European Spanish citing respectively geographical or cultural arguments.


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