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The Spanish Alphabet

There are 29 letters in the Spanish alphabet with 5 vowels and 24 consonants.

A a
B b
C c
CH ch
D d
E e
F f
G g
H h
I i
J j
K k
L l
LL ll
M m
N n
Ñ ñ
O o
P p
Q q
R r
S s
T t
U u
V v
W w
X x
Y y
Z z

Consonant + Vowel

Let’s start with the most basic consonant-vowel combinations and hear how each is pronounced in an example.

D
dos
N
nada
F
favor
P
padre
J
rojo
S
segundo
K
kilo
T
tarta
L
leche
W
kiwi
M
mesa
Y
yo

The Five Vowels: a e i o u

Letters “a/e/o” are called the strong vowels, and “i/u” are the weak vowels.

Diphthongs

A diphthong = a strong vowel + a weak vowel OR a weak vowel + a weak vowel

The diphthongs “ai/ei/oi” generally become “ay/ey/oy” at the end of words EXCEPT at the end of conjugated verbs.

ai
bailar
ia
piano
ei
seis
ie
siete
oi
sois
io
armario
ui
muy
iu
ciudad
au
autobús
ua
agua
eu
euro
ue
bueno
ou
bou
uo
antiguo

Triphthongs

iai
estudiáis
uai
Uruguay
iei
cambiéis
uei
averigüéis

Consonant Blends

When “l/r” are placed after “p/b/c/g/t/d/f”, their sounds tend to blend together.

pl
plato
pr
profesor
bl
blanco
br
libro
cl
clase
cr
escritorio
gl
inglés
gr
negro
tl
atlántico
tr
tres
fl
flor
fr
fresco
dr
madre

Word Stress

1. ’ is the one and only written accent mark in Spanish. It appears only above the five vowels: á, é, í, ó, ú.

The accent mark indicates which part of the word is stressed.

pa
dico

2. The stress of vowel-ending words falls on the second last syllable.

pirata
amigo

3. Except words ending with “n” or “s”, the stress of consonant-ending words falls on the last syllable.

profesor
español
joven
muchos

4. When a diphthong is the stressed syllable, the stress falls on the strong vowel.

bueno
estudiante

Special Pronunciations

1. b/v

1) As the initial or a word or after the letters “m/n”, both are pronounced:

beso
vino
ambos
en vano

2) In other cases, both are pronounced:

lobo
llave

2. c/q

1) “c + a/o/u”

cama
cosa
cuna

2) “q + u + e/i”

qué
alquilar

3) “c + c/n/t/d”

acción
cnico
contacto
anécdota

3. ch

ch + a = cha
chaqueta
ch + e = che
leche
ch + i = chi
mochila
ch + o = cho
chocolate
ch + u = chu
lechuza

4. g

1) “g + a/o/u

gato
agosto
alguno

2) “g + u + e/i”

juguete
seguir

3) “g + e/i”

ligero
gimnasio

4) In “gue/gui”, if the “u” has two dots on top, the “u” must be pronounced:

cigüeña
pingüino

5. h

The letter “h” is always muted. But it can never be omitted in writing or spelling.

hombre
hospital

6. ñ

niño
español

7. r

1) The Spanish “r” is a rhotic one.

When “r” is in the middle or at the end of a word, it’s short, soft and less explosive.

caro
tener

2) When “r” is the initial letter or after “n/l/s” or doubled as “rr”, it’s trilled strongly.

rico
alrededor
perro

8. ll

The consonant “ll” is pronounced differently in Spain and Latin America. Tap the words below to hear the difference. (“ES” = Spain; “MX” = Mexico)

llave [ES]
llevar [ES]
pollito [ES]
llave [MX]
llevar [MX]
pollito [MX]
llorar [ES]
lluvia [ES]
llorar [MX]
lluvia [MX]

9. j

j + a = ja
roja
j + e = je
jefe
j + i = ji
jirafa
j + o = jo
conejo
j + u = ju
jugar

10. x

1) When “x” is the initial letter of a word:

xilófono
xenófobo

2) When “x” is between two vowels:

examen
éxito

3) When “x” is before a consonant:

In some countries, it’s pronounced as “s”, but in some other regions, it’s “ks”:

texto
explicar

4) Except in these two words, they are pronounced like “j”:

xico
mexicano

11. Z

1) “z + a/o/u”

manzana [ES]
marzo [ES]
zumo [ES]
manzana [MX]
marzo [MX]
zumo [MX]

In the following cases, “z” and “c” are pronounced like the English “th” in Spain, whereas in Latin America, they are pronounced like “s” .

2) “c + e/i”

princesa [ES]
príncipe [ES]
princesa [MX]
príncipe [MX]