Spanish/Lessons/¿Cómo te llamas?

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Lesson 1 ¿Cómo te llamas?
The aqueduct of Segovia.

Dialogue

Raúl: ¡Hola! Me llamo Raúl. ¿Cómo te llamas?
Sofía: Hola, Raúl. Me llamo Sofía. ¿Cómo se escribe Raúl?
Raúl: Se escribe R-A-Ú-L. ¿Qué tal?
Sofía: Bien. ¿Y tú?
Raúl: Fenomenal, gracias.
Sofía: ¡Qué fantástico! Adiós, Raúl.
Raúl: ¡Hasta luego!

Translation (wait until the end of the lesson).

Hello!

Spanish Vocabulary • ¿Cómo te llamas?
¡Hola! Hello!

Inglés Español (help)
Hello Hola (listen)
Good morning! ¡Buenos días! (listen)
Good day!
Good evening! ¡Buenas tardes! (listen)
Good night! ¡Buenas noches! (listen)
See you later! ¡Hasta luego! (listen)
See you tomorrow! ¡Hasta mañana! (listen)
Goodbye Adiós (listen)
Notes
Examples

Go to the exercise.

What's your name?

To ask someone else's name in Spanish, use cómo, then one of the phrases in the table below (¿Cómo te llamas? is "What's your name?" (literally How do you call yourself?).

In Spanish, to say your name, you use the reflexive verb llamarse, which means literally to call oneself (Me llamo Robert is "I call myself Robert) meaning "My name is Robert".

Spanish Verb • ¿Cómo te llamas?
Llamarse To call oneself

Inglés Español
I am called (I call myself) Me llamo
You (familiar, singular) are called (You call yourself) Te llamas
He/She/You (formal, singular) is/are called (He/She/You call yourself) Se llama
We are called (We call ourselves) Nos llamamos
You (familiar, plural) are called (You all call yourselves) Os llamáis
They/You (formal, plural) are called (They/You all call yourselves) Se llaman
Notes
Examples

Go to the exercise.

Simple Vocabulary

Spanish Vocabulary • ¿Cómo te llamas?
¿Qué tal? How are you?

Inglés Español
It's a pleasure. Es un placer.
A real pleasure. Mucho gusto.
The pleasure is mine. El gusto es mío.
How are you? ¿Qué tal? (listen)
¿Cómo estás?
Great! Fantástico
Fantástica
Great Genial
Very well Muy bien
Well Bien
So-so Más o menos
Bad Mal
Really bad Fatal
And you? ¿Y tú?
Thank you Gracias (listen)
Thank you very much Muchas gracias
You're Welcome De nada

con mucho gusto

gusto

Yes
No No
Notes

For some of the words above, there are two options. The one ending in "o" is for males, and the one ending in "a" is for females. It's all to do with agreement, which is covered in future chapters.

Also, there are cultural differences in how people respond to "How are you?". In the U.S., we might answer "Mal" if we have a headache, or we're having a bad hair day. In Spanish-speaking cultures, "mal" would be used if a family member were very ill, or somebody lost their job. Similarly, "Fatal" in the U.S. might mean a ruined manicure or a fight with one´s girlfriend, but would be reserved more for things like losing one's home in a Spanish-speaking country.

Expressing "you are welcome" is more formal in Costa Rica than in other countries. Con mucho gusto is formal. Gusto is less formal. De nada,in some areas is considered slightly insulting and should not be used.

Examples

Go to the exercise.

The Spanish Alphabet

Here is the traditional Spanish alphabet. The current Spanish alphabet is made up of the letters with numbers above them, and is also sorted in that order. Please read the notes and sections below. (Blue and red letters are a part of the normal English alphabet).

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27
a b c ch d e f g h i j k l ll m n ñ o p q r s t u v w x y z
Notes about Ñ

N and Ñ are considered two different letters. They are alphabetized as separate letters, so Ñ always comes after N, regardless of where it appears in the word. Ex: muñeca comes after municipal.

Notes about CH and LL

CH and LL are no longer distinct letters of the alphabet. In 1994, the Real Academia Española (Spanish Royal Academy) declared that they should be treated as digraphs for collation purposes. Accordingly, words beginning with CH and LL are now alphabetized under C and L, respectively. In 2010, the Real Academia Española declared that CH and LL would no longer be treated as letters, bringing the total number of letters of the alphabet down to 27.

Notes about K and W

K and W are part of the alphabet but are mostly seen in foreign derived words and names, such as karate and whiskey. For instance, kilo is commonly used to refer to a kilogram.

Consonants

Although the above will help you understand, proper pronunciation of Spanish consonants is a bit more complicated:

Most of the consonants are pronounced as they are in American English with these exceptions:

  • The same sound for e and i is written like que and qui, where the u is silent (IPA: /ke/ and /ki/).
  • The same sound for e and i is written like gue and gui, where the u is silent (IPA: /ge/ and /gi/). If the word needs the u to be pronounced, you write it with a diaeresis e.g. pingüino, lengüeta.

Vowels

The pronunciation of vowels is as follows:

The "u" is always silent after a g or a q (as in "qué" pronounced keh).

Spanish also uses the ¨ (diaeresis) diacritic mark over the vowel u to indicate that it is pronounced separately in places where it would normally be silent. For example, in words such as vergüenza ("shame") or pingüino ("penguin"), the u is pronounced as in the English "w" and so forms a diphthong with the following vowel: [we] and [wi] respectively. It is also used to preserve sound in stem changes and in commands: averiguar (to research) - averigüemos (let's research).

The y [ʝ] "Reyes" is similar to the y of "yet", but more voiced (in some parts of Latin America it is pronounced as s in "vision" [ʒ] or sh in "flash" [ʃ]) At the end of a word or when it means "and" ("y") it is pronounced like i.

Acute accents

Spanish uses the ´ (Acute) diacritic mark over vowels to indicate a vocal stress on a word that would normally be stressed on another syllable; Stress is contrastive. For example, the word ánimo is normally stressed on a, meaning "mood, spirit." While animo is stressed on ni meaning "I cheer." And animó is stressed on meaning "he cheered."

Additionally the acute mark is used to disambiguate certain words which would otherwise be homographs. It's used in various question word or relative pronoun pairs such as cómo (how?)& como (as), dónde(where?) & donde (where), and some other words such as (you) & tu (your), él (he/him) & el (the).

A E I O U
á é í ó ú

How do you spell that?

Spanish Vocabulary • ¿Cómo te llamas?
¿Qué tal? How are you?

Inglés Español
How is it spelled? ¿Cómo se deletrea?
¿Cómo se escribe?
It is spelled Se escribe
B as in Barcelona Con B de Barcelona
Examples

Go to the exercise.

Summary

In this lesson, you have learned

You should now do the exercise related to each section (found here), and translate the dialogue at the top before moving on to lesson 2...

Drill the words covered in this lesson with this Flashcard Exchange deck.

¡Aprovéchalo!
Learn the Spanish language
Contents Introduction
Lesson one Lesson two Lesson three
Lesson four Lesson five Lesson six
Lesson seven Lesson eight Lesson nine
Pronunciation Contributors

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