First step to Spanish Language


1.

Be realistic. This will involve time and effort. The more you put in, the more you get out. Set realistic goals with your tutor.


2.


Learn the Spanish Alphabet below.

3.

Learn the Spanish Verb System. Not as complicated as its often made out to be
 Hablo
 Hablas
 Habla
 Hablamos
 Habláis
 Hablan
4.
Read aloud in Spanish every day for 10 minutes (leave a spanish magazine or book beside your bed and do it as soon as you wake up).
5.
Put your CD from the book into your car and listen to it even on very short trips. If you are on your own its a great opportunity to repeat and practice as loud as you like!  And its fun to do it with a partner!

6.
Enter a Spanish chatroom on the Internet.  Find a Spanish partner who can't speak English (a bit desperate but it works).

7.
Put on Spanish subtitles when you are watching a DVD or, better still, watch it in Spanish with English subtitles.

8.
Put on Spanish radio whilst you are busy doing other things.  It is not important that you understand - your brain will pick up on the intonation and accent.


9.

Go to Spanish meetup groups (they usually meet in pubs) where you will meet other peoplepracticing their Spanish and having fun.


10.

Expect to make loads of mistakes, and to keep on making mistakes - think about the number of mistakes you made when you were learningEnglish and how embarrassed you felt about   that?



11.


Label your furniture (small post-its) with its equivalent in Spanish.


12.


Congratulate yourself for having the courage to go forward and do something different. Party with it!!!!


GETTING STARTED

1.  The Spanish Alphabet is formed by the following twenty-nine letters:

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, za, 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  

The names of the letters of the alphabet are:

A: aE: eJ: jotaN: eneR: ereW: uve doble
B: beF: efe K: kaÑ: eñeS: eseX:equis
C: ceG: geL: eleO: oT: teY: i griega
CH:cheH: hacheLL: elleP: peU: u
Z: zeda or zeta

D: deI: i M: emeQ: cu
V: ve





                       






These letter names are, of course, prounounced with Spanish pronunciation; not "ay," "bee," "cee," (as in English), but: 
"ah," "bay," "say" ("thay," in Spain), "chay," "day," "ay," "AY-fay," "gay"," "AH-chay," "ee," "HOH-ta," "kah," "AY-lay," "AY-yay," "AY-may," "AY-nay," "AY-nyay," "oh," "pay," "coo," "AY-ray," "AY-rray," "AY-say," "tay," "oo," "OO-vay," "OO-vay DOH-blay" (or "DOH-blay OO"), "AY-kees," "EE gree-AY-gah," and "SAY-tah" ("THAY-tah," in Spain).



Consonant Pronunciation

Some consonants are pronounced in a markedly different way from their equivalent in English. The most important of these differences are as follows:

1.  b and v have the same sound:

     bueno    barba    vino    varios

2.  (i) Before a, o and U: c is a hard sound as in come: 
   
     campo arranc  coste banco cuando

     (ii) Before e and i: c is a soft sound as in the English th in
         thin:

      cena    acento    cine    incidente

3.  (i) g - before a,o and u, g is a hard sound as in go

         garage    ganar    gordo    gol    gusto

    (ii) before e or i; g is a sound made in the throat, like ch in Scottish 'loch'

         gente    gerente    giro    gitano    dirige

   (iii)  gu followed by a is pronounced 'gw' (as in Gwen):

          guapo    agua    guardar

   (iv)  gu followed by e or i is a hard sound (as in 'go'): u is silent:

          guerra    llegué    guitarra    Miguel

    (v)  In the combinations gue and gui a diaeresis is placed over the u.
          This indicates that the sound is 'gw' (as in Gwen):

          averigue    verguenza    arguir

4.    h  h is always silent: hombre is pronounced 'ombre' 'otel' etc

5.    J  is a sound made in the throat, like ch in the Scottish 'loch':

          hijo    jardin    Jorge    paja    Méjico

6.    ll  ll is pronounced like lli in 'pillion';

          llave    calle    llegar    hallar

7.    r, rr 

      (i)    A single r at the beginning of a word is normally 'trilled' r 'rolled',
              eg. the r in el río. Otherwise it is a single trill or 'flap' as n cara.

     (ii)    rr, as in burro, sierra, is not considered to be a separate letter.  It
             cannot be split to form part of two different syllables.  It is always
             rolled like the Scottish 'r'.

8.    - x is pronounced

       (i)  between vowels; can be either 'ks' (as in expert) or 'gs'
            (as in example):

            exento    existir    exito

       (ii) before a consonant: 'ks' or, more usually 's';

            excepto    exclamar    experiencia

9.    z  In Castillian Spanish (spoken mainly in the North and centre of Spain)
       this sound is pronounced like 'th' in 'thin.  In much of Spain and Spanish
       America the sound is 's'.

       zona    zigzag    zozobra

French for beginners


Learn French with hundreds of pages written for anyone with little or no French knowledge. Whether you're just beginning to learn French or picking it up again after a long absence, you'll find everything you need on these pages.

 If you don't know where/how to start learning French, try the checklist or subscribe to my 20-week French for Beginners email course. They include the same lessons organized in a logical study order so that you can start at the beginning and work your way up.

If you're taking a trip to France or another French-speaking country, you might be interested in my special 6-week email course on Travel French.

Not sure of your level? Try my French proficiency test.

The links below include some additional resources to help you learn French, both on- and off-line.

If you have any questions, need a better explanation of one of my lessons, don't see a lesson on something you've studied in class, or just feel like practicing what you've learned about French, please post a message on the French for Beginners Forum. I check the forum several times a day, and there are lots of other members happy to assist you, so it's the quickest place to find answers. In addition, you'll be helping others with the same questions, you'll probably find other useful information to help you learn French, and you might even make a few new friends.

English and French are using the same alphabet; even better English and French are using several hundred words that have the same spelling and meaning in both languages.

Here are one hundred examples!

rage, bandit, banquet, Bible, bizarre, boulevard, avenue, bracelet, budget, capable, capital, torture, tradition, train, triple, type, union, urgent, vacant, vague, vengeance, zone, information, conversation, menace, minute, municipal, muscle, nation, national, lion, indulgent, installation, inspection, instrument, grain, horizon, imitation, humble, final, fortune, golf, motion, existence, durable, date, destruction, construction, dispute, docile, contact, concentration, cage, canal, canon, cigarette, client, code, colonel, combat, art, article, aspect, pigeon, portrait, biscuit, circuit, piano, rail, rural, air, plateau, change, orange, tribunal, taxes, fruits, assassin, absence, accent, accident, accusation, acquisition, action, adoption, affection, agent, agriculture, album, alliance, allusion, ambition, amusement, anecdote, angle, animal, aptitude, volume, tunnel, style, sublime.

You might assume from this that you have less to learn than you anticipated. In a way it is true for if you did see these words in writing you would guess correctly their meaning. However if you only heard them you probably would not recognize them because their French pronunciation is very different from the English one.


FIRST STEP TO ENGLISH LANGUAGE


Learn English in Two Easy Steps

WHY ENGLISH? Today the whole world is buzzing with English and internet has shorten the world. Both English language and Internet together have brought the whole world right in your drawing room. Now you can do whatever you want to without leaving the comfort of your home .So English is has become a must have. Nothing is imaginable without it. How to solve the problem? Here is the solution!

Only Two Easy Steps Take only Two easy Steps and learn English with as ease as you say 1,2,3. If you really want to learn this language, don't run after the written track of learning English as it hampers your progress, it is a stumbling block in

your way of learning English. Simply follow the two simple steps and learn English.

FIRST STEP

No speech (speaking) can be imagined without listening. Develop a habit of listening to something in English daily. I mean to say, listen to English songs , listen to short stories, listen to interviews and listen to short and simple conversations regularly.' Listen and listen and listen on. Repeat listening what you have just listened. Not once but many times. Do you know why I am exhorting you to listen so much. Perhaps not. If so, please answer this simple question: How does a child become able to speak? It is simple. He/She is compelled to listen whatever their parents and people around them speak. Gradually they begin to reproduce what they have heard. I think you have got the point. So enjoy listening. Listening practice will fix correct pronunciation of the words in your mind and you'll be able to utter them as naturally and easily as a native speaker does. Don't take this task easily .It requires a lot patience and perseverance on your part .you can gradually develop it if only you are bent on to.

SECOND STEP

Speak what you have listened, as the more you listen, the more you will be able to speak and the more learning of the language will occur. So go on practicing speaking whatever you have heard. Furthermore speaking practice will train your mouth and ears. The main ideas of what you have listened and spoken will get fixed into your memory. Once the structures of sentences, phrases get fixed in your subconscious you'll never have to fumble for words, phrases or sentences when you converse with your friends or with someone else. The words will smoothly and fluently roll out of your mouth. You won't falter. Your progress in conversation will not get hampered. When you have taken these two steps , you will find amazing change. Now you can start to put in a little time in reading and writing skills as reading and writing skills have their own importance and place in a language learning and you can develop them on the strong foundation of listening and speaking skills later.



How to Learn English Vocbulary


The 100 Most Common Written Words in English

1. the
2. of
3. and
4. a
5. to
6. in
7. is
8. you
9. that
10. it
11. he
12. was
13. for
14. on
15. are
16. as
17. with
18. his
19. they
20. I
21. at
22. be
23. this
24. have
25. from
26. or
27. one
28. had
29. by
30. word
31. but
32. not
33. what
34. all
35. were
36. we
37. when
38. your
39. can
40. said
41. there
42. use
43. an
44. each
45. which
46. she
47. do
48. how
49. their
50. if