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Facts & Stats

If you're learning Spanish, chances are one reason you picked it to learn was because you expected you would have a good chance of using it some day. If so, you're probably right — Spanish is the most common first language in the Americas, and Spanish speakers also can be found in Spain (of course), in much of the United States, the Philippines, and even Africa.

And there are some other facts about Spanish you might be interested in knowing. In no particular order, here are some of the numbers about Spanish I discovered during a recent afternoon of Web surfing:

  • Spanish and English are in a virtual dead heat to be the second most spoken language in the world. As of 1999, Spanish had 332 million speakers, while English had 322 million. They were far behind Chinese, with 885 million. (If people who speak English as a second language were included, however, English would come out on top.)
  • Spanish, along with French, is the official language of Equatorial Guinea, making it the only country in Africa with an official Spanish presence, although Spanish also is spoken some in Morocco. The country's official name is República de Guinea Ecuatoria.
  • Other countries or semi-autonomous areas with significant Spanish-speaking populations include Andorra, Argentina, Belize, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, France, Gibraltar, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, the Philippines, Puerto Rico, Uruguay, the United States and Venezuela.
  • Nearly 30 percent of the residents of Spain have a first language other than Spanish, although most also use Spanish as a second language. Languages of Spain include Catalan (some 12 percent of the population speak it as a first language, and even more speak it as a second language), Galician (8 percent of the population) and Basque (a little more than 1 percent).
  • As of 1998, the United States has the fifth largest Hispanic population, about 30 million people (the exact number depending on how Hispanics are counted). Of them, two-thirds trace their roots to Mexico, and 86 percent say Spanish is their first language.
  • During the sweeps period earlier this year, the top local TV newscast in the New York City area was Noticias 41, a Spanish-language broadcast. And Noticiero Univision, the newscast of a national Spanish-language network, beat out the big three network news shows.
  • California alone has 5.5 million people who speaks Spanish at home. Other states with high Spanish-speaking populations include Texas (3.4 million), New York (1.8 million), and Florida (1.5 million).
  • About 5.8 percent of the people who use the Internet speak Spanish, making it the No. 4 language in the Internet community, following English (51.3 percent), Japanese (8.1 percent) German (5.9 percent). Close behind is Chinese, with 5.4 percent, followed by French with 3.9 percent.
  • A recent study of 25 metro markets in the United States found that Spanish-language programming was the sixth most popular format.

Because the birth rate in the Spanish-speaking word is higher than among people whose first language is English, Spanish can be expected to remain firmly in the No. 2 spot for years to come. And if the economies of Latin American countries improve, Spanish could gain importance in worldwide trade and communications as well.

These photos show Spanish-related locations.

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Learn Spanish

Vowels Alphabet Basics Numbers
Days of the Week Months Eating Colors
Family Directions Translation  

                                  

Vowels

a

a

e

e

i

i

o

o

u

u

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Alphabet

a

 a

b

 be

c

 ce

 ch 

 che

d

 de 

e

 e

f

 efe

g

 ge

h

 hache

i

 i

j

 jota

k

 ka

l

 ele

ll

 elle

m

 eme

n

 ene

ñ

 eñe

o

 o

p

 pe

q

 cu

r

 ere

s

 ese

t

 te

u

 u

v

 ve

w

 doble u/doble ve 

x

 equis

y

 i griega

z

 zeta

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Basics
 hello  Hola
 good-bye  Adiós
 yes  Sí
 no  No
 friend  Amigo (m), Amiga (f)
 thank you  Gracias
 where is the bathroom?  ¿Dónde está el baño?

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Numbers
 0  zero  cero
 1  one  uno (m), una (f)
 2  two  dos
 3  three  tres
 4  four  cuatro
 5  five  cinco
 6  six  seis
 7  seven  siete
 8  eight  ocho
 9  nine  nueve
 10  ten  diez
 11  eleven  once
 12  twelve  doce
 13  thirteen  trece
 14  fourteen  catorce
 15  fifteen  quince
 16  sixteen  dieciséis
 17  seventeen  diecisiete
 18  eighteen  dieciocho
 19  nineteen  diecinueve
 20  twenty  veinte
 21  twenty-one   veintiuno
 22  twenty-two   veintidós
 30  thirty  treinta
 31  thirty-one  treinta y uno
 40  forty  cuarenta
 50  fifty  cincuenta
 60  sixty  sesenta
 70  seventy  setenta
 80  eighty  ochenta
 90  ninety  noventa
 100  one hundred  cien
 101  one hundred and one   ciento uno
 200  two hundred  doscientos
 300  three hundred  trescientos
 400  four hundred  cuatrocientos
 500  five hundred  quinientos
 600  six hundred  seiscientos
 700  seven hundred  setecientos
 800  eight hundred  ochocientos
 900  nine hundred  novecientos
 1,000  one thousand  mil
 2,000  two thousand  dos mil
 1,000,000   one million  un millón
 2,000,000   two million  dos millones

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Days of the Week
 Monday  lunes
 Tuesday  martes
 Wednesday  miércoles
 Thursday  jueves
 Friday  viernes
 Saturday  sábado
 Sunday  domingo

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Months
 January  enero
 February  febrero
 March  marzo
 April  abril
 May  mayo
 June  junio
 July  julio
 August  agosto
 September  septiembre
 October  octubre
 November  noviembre
 December  diciembre

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Eating
 napkin  servilleta
 fork  tenedor
 spoon  cuchara
 knife  cuchillo
 plate  plato
 water  agua
 bread  pan
 butter  mantequilla
 tea  té
 coffee  café
 salt  sal
 pepper  pimienta

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Colors
       black  negro
       blue  azul
       brown  marrón, café
       green  verde
       grey  gris
       orange   naranja, anaranjado 
       pink  rosado
       purple   violeta, morado 
       red  rojo
       white  blanco
       yellow   amarillo

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Family
 husband  esposo, marido
 wife  esposa
 children  niños
 son  hijo
 daughter  hija
 father  padre, papá (informal)
 mother  madre, mamá (informal)
 brother  hermano
 sister  hermana
 grandfather  abuelo
 grandmother  abuela
 uncle  tío
 aunt  tía
 nephew  sobrino
 niece  sobrina
 cousin  primo (m), prima (f)
 brother-in-law  cuñado
 sister-in-law  cuñada
 father-in-law  suegro
 mother-in-law  suegra
 son-in-law  yerno
 daughter-in-law  nuera

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Directions
 left  Izquierda
 right  Derecha
 far  Lejos
 near  Cerca
 street  Calle
 avenue  Avenida
 north  Norte
 south  Sur
 east  Este
 west  Oeste

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Find a Word Here!!!

Translation
 Translation courtesy of SpanishDICT.com 
 

 English Word
 Approx


 

 Spanish Word
 Approx

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Vowels Alphabet Basics Numbers
Days of the Week Months Eating Colors
Family Directions Translation  

 

Eat Spanish

     Olives  Olives Gaspacho     Paella
     Spanish fish stew Spanish Tortilla Charcuterie 2     Serrano HamCourgettes

 

Log on to http://www.tienda.com/recipes.html?aid=21 for many spanish Recipes!!!

Here are some other helping web sites for you to look up

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