Spanish Pronunciation: trilled [r] after [s] #Shorts

preview_player
Показать описание
#Shorts
On this channel I make videos on topics in Spanish language and linguistics. Mostly phonetics and phonology, but also dialectology, sociolinguistics, and historical linguistics. Many of my videos come from questions asked by viewers in the comment section.
Spanish language
Spanish pronunciation
Spanish phonetics
Spanish phonology
Spanish dialects
Enlace
Spanish
Foreign language learning
Foreign language pronunciation
Phonetics and phonology
Spanish R
Spanish r
Spanish rolled r
how to roll spanish r
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

Omitting or aspirating is OK for me. Thanks for this very short but most helpful video.

userts-bl
Автор

I am Cuban and I use all 3 types 😅 depending if I am yelling, explaining something or just speaking fast to someone

yadianamolina
Автор

Good to see you back. I like these video "shorts".

angelt
Автор

I think that the amount of breath pressure needed to get the trill going tends to distort the /s/ right before it, to the point that some people will just omit the vague sound and go straight to the trill. Others will reduce the breath pressure to avoid distorting the /s/, and this weakens the trill so it becomes more of an assibilated /r/. I've also heard that some Spaniards blend their apicoalveolar /s/ into their trill, adding one extra flap of the tongue to the beginning of it, so /sr/ sounds like a slightly lengthened trill.

davidcrandall
Автор

For the past year or so, I've gone through several words or phrases that I repeat to myself when I'm on my own while focusing on pronunciation, primarily to practice trilled r in different placements in words. It started out by saying "carro" repeatedly while driving in my car (which probably offput a few people who saw me doing it with my windows down). Eventually I got to "las ranas, " and I still haven't been able to reliably pronounce it well. I didn't realize it was such a common issue. It's interesting to hear the different ways of reducing it.

johnroberts
Автор

cab you make one for "l" and "r" together?

goodatpartying
Автор

Which option do you recommend for someone whose objective is speaking "standard" Latin American Spanish? This seems to be the one situation in Spanish where there really isn't an obvious middle ground choice.

stevediben
Автор

Thank you! I can't understand what's going with the assibilated r. Where in the mouth is it pronounced?

Aritul
Автор

Which one does native Mexican Spanish speakers use?

lindas
Автор

Good video. I'm aiming for a general, non-southern Iberian accent and was wondering if you know which is typically used in these regions?

HanniblBarca
Автор

I speak Spanish and I have no idea of what are you walking about, that is so easy

MANAMARC
Автор

I had never heard that or any person omitting or making less the sound of the letter S when it comes before a word that begins with R and I am a native Spanish,

baquidesArGos