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Curriculum | Spanish Courses


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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Vowels |
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a
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a
|
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e
|
e
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i
|
i
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o
|
o
|
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u
|
u
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Alphabet |
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a
|
a |
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b
|
be |
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c
|
ce |
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ch
|
che |
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d
|
de |
|
e
|
e |
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f
|
efe |
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g
|
ge |
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h
|
hache |
|
i
|
i |
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j
|
jota |
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k
|
ka |
|
l
|
ele |
|
ll
|
elle |
|
m
|
eme |
|
n
|
ene |
|
ñ
|
eñe |
|
o
|
o |
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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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