Neutral Spanish vs. Dominican Spanish

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  • Опубликовано: 21 авг 2024
  • Spanish expert Esther Hermida sits down with the Dominican detective Gadiel De Orbe to master El Español Neutro
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Комментарии • 1,9 тыс.

  • @Ban-me4uq
    @Ban-me4uq 4 года назад +581

    Dominican accent exist*
    Neutro accent: i am about to end this man's whole career

  • @rollenmuziek
    @rollenmuziek 4 года назад +1762

    I’m glad they put more emphasis on calling this “neutral Spanish” than in the last video with things being “correct” or not. Like if we’re all speaking Spanish and it’s regional and we all understand what we’re saying, then it’s still correct, but it might not be “neutral” enough for people that aren’t from that area to understand what we mean.

    • @recoil53
      @recoil53 4 года назад +39

      If you think about it, most languages started off by being "incorrect". Spanish and Italian are Latin languages, but obviously are different and aren't like actual Latin either. But you wouldn't tell the speaker of either that they are wrong.
      The changes are correct, but not the same as their mother tongue.

    • @ogd5074
      @ogd5074 4 года назад +10

      Jaq Neebe I’ve heard it called proper Spanish

    • @rollenmuziek
      @rollenmuziek 4 года назад +23

      2900 Lieutenant I still feel like them handling it this way, with “neutral” Spanish, is way less classist than calling it “proper” would be though.

    • @omaryouesoes
      @omaryouesoes 4 года назад +6

      All languages have a neutral/proper/educated/formal version.

    • @Threshingfloor814
      @Threshingfloor814 4 года назад +15

      @@rollenmuziek There is no "neutral" Spanish. It's a symmetric pluricentric language with no "Dachsprache." There is a broad consensus on certain things mentioned in this video, but her position on lexical variations is questionable.

  • @meowsasu
    @meowsasu 4 года назад +2395

    She can't come and tell me how to speak "neutral Spanish" if she says "fuistes". 🤦

    • @salimwillis1400
      @salimwillis1400 4 года назад +7

      Lollipops and unicorns 😂😂😂

    • @ninetails114
      @ninetails114 4 года назад +44

      wtf is fuistes ? xD

    • @thejjic
      @thejjic 4 года назад +65

      dandre clarke eso es fuiste* pero mal dicho fuistes*

    • @zlumi428
      @zlumi428 4 года назад +38

      @@ninetails114 You went= Fuiste, though I have heard some Mexicans and South Americans saying fuistes...💁🏻‍♀️🤷🏻‍♀️ But I think that's wrong...🙅🏻‍♀️🤦🏻‍♀️

    • @antonramil2408
      @antonramil2408 4 года назад +80

      @@zlumi428 It is, a lot of spanish speaking people make the same mistake. Here, across the pond (Spain) It is the same, you hear a lot of people saying "fuistes", "dijistes", "cogistes", etc. and It is completely wrong.

  • @josecarvajal6654
    @josecarvajal6654 4 года назад +396

    I´m dominican, I know Gadiel had a harder time because he was raised in the US. "Dominicanyorks" (as we call them) usually only know the informal way of speaking, as spanish there is usually only spoken with friends and family; profesionally they speak english. Dominicans from Dominican Republic speak informally with family and friends, but formally at a profesional/academical spaces. I think a Dominican from the DR would´ve no problem doing this.

    • @ReservedSeating
      @ReservedSeating 4 года назад +31

      Thank you for this! I feel like your explanation should have prefaced this video.

    • @cakekyo7
      @cakekyo7 4 года назад +26

      That depends on where the Dominican comes from and the educational background. If they did not receive any education in regards of that, they will not be able to neutralize their accent nor pronounce all the letters from words completely.

    • @artbyisaury4436
      @artbyisaury4436 4 года назад +9

      This is so true, I work at a call center in Spanish and despite the fact we all Dominicans we can't talk the clients like that

    • @YenellyT
      @YenellyT 4 года назад +10

      Jose Carvajal An educated Dominican from dr will for sure speak correctly, but the people that have no education over there which is unfortunately a lot!!

    • @ervin9320
      @ervin9320 4 года назад

      Dominican Spanish: hebzljeagdkwkkzjd blaheiselzgesmxmdep

  • @yureimyciriaco4934
    @yureimyciriaco4934 4 года назад +434

    "Tienes que pronunciar cada letra"
    *laughs in andalú'*

    • @robertonoguera7076
      @robertonoguera7076 4 года назад +12

      creo que nadie pronuncia cada letra... es uno de los principios con los cuales el latin vulgar evolucionó en las lenguas romance modernas. Muchos latinos van a EEUU y sus hijos jamás pasan por un sistema escolar hispano, por lo tanto lo único que saben de español es lo que escuchan en sus casas... es.. raro

    • @tripatripatripatri
      @tripatripatripatri 4 года назад

      JAJAJAAJAJAJAJAJAJAJ

    • @JustLord5
      @JustLord5 4 года назад +5

      Laughs in Puerto Rican

    • @luciavargas-machuca6853
      @luciavargas-machuca6853 4 года назад +2

      Jajaja la verdad es q los andaluces nos comemos muchas letras

    • @Satory-wt9dg
      @Satory-wt9dg 4 года назад +2

      *laughs in Caribbean*

  • @andreasosa8097
    @andreasosa8097 4 года назад +71

    "This is the first time somebody tells me I'm wrong"
    -what you gonna do about it?
    "I'MMA CORRECT IT 😡"
    Love this guy

  • @dtd8265
    @dtd8265 4 года назад +308

    Non-native here but learning! I understand the point of neutral spanish being somewhat of a necessity, but I also love the flavor of each dialect!

    • @ebonyh4684
      @ebonyh4684 4 года назад +9

      Same

    • @petra1995
      @petra1995 4 года назад +12

      Y e s. Bring me all the flavours! The neutral Spanish simply works as a bridge between them

    • @jguillermooliver
      @jguillermooliver 4 года назад +14

      Neutral Spanish doesn't exist and it's not natural for native speakers. The only people that study that are actors in Mexico or USA for tv. Many hispanic people there speak Spanglish and they think that are speaking Spanish so they need it. Nobody else study that because anyone with a bit of formal education at school (all Hispanics study the same grammar and language at school) can tell what's slang and what's not. That's the only important thing in order to communicate with anyone anywhere but we dont need to change our own regional accent to do that. Beside that most of people doesn't know or care what is "neutral" Spanish, only actors working in those two countries.

    • @Lil08103
      @Lil08103 4 года назад +1

      @@jguillermooliver i think there are levels of neutrality. i'd say few may care about it in the most entreme sense but you cant tell me south americans dont care when they are trying to understand caribbeans. it almost feels like an entirely different language.

    • @jguillermooliver
      @jguillermooliver 4 года назад

      It's the same language with differents accents. It feels different for you but Spanish is not your native language. Unless one of the speakers use a lot of slang on purpose there's not problem to understand anyone. It doesn't matter if they are from the caribe or anywhere else we understand each other but you are not a native so you need to practice more if you can't understand because I have no problem. The same may happen in your same city with people of different ages, education, and so on if they speak with slang that you don't know and they stick with it. Also happened but much more in English because we don't change spellings, but you do, we speak the same language. Only foreigners are always asking the same. Yes, we understand each other but American Hispanic people in USA speak Spanglish so they need to study real Spanish, we don't. English speaking people really need to study neutral English because I know you don't understand certain accents from UK and Ireland, jamaica, ebonics an so on, but it's your language so I can't be sure but you don't tell me what we can understand and what we can't or what we need. You clearly don't have the understanding to say so.

  • @ChristianRamosTheKingSlater
    @ChristianRamosTheKingSlater 4 года назад +251

    Idk why but professor Esther is super cute when she gets enthusiastic lol

  • @samirahhassan398
    @samirahhassan398 4 года назад +825

    “Fuistes” isn’t a word, se equivocó la teacher...

    • @ashenone3050
      @ashenone3050 4 года назад +40

      fuiste instead , but its basically the same

    • @Sara-uk8ve
      @Sara-uk8ve 4 года назад +41

      it's a word that we use in Spain a lot soo

    • @hinkab
      @hinkab 4 года назад +40

      @@ashenone3050 yes but she was correcting him for skipping or adding just one letter. She said it wrong so she must also be corrected.

    • @ashenone3050
      @ashenone3050 4 года назад

      @@hinkab agree

    • @DaianaVilca
      @DaianaVilca 4 года назад +20

      Ashen one tengo entendido que "fuistes" es incorrecto, por más que la gente lo use

  • @TokenTeran
    @TokenTeran 4 года назад +782

    "Fuistes" is soooo wrong and cringy to hear and she didn't even notice it.

  • @EmilyBeanz
    @EmilyBeanz 4 года назад +159

    This reminds me of my college Spanish class and my Dominican partner failed the assignment. Not once... but twice. LOL
    I was like WTH!?

    • @sylviamccormick3961
      @sylviamccormick3961 4 года назад +3

      😁 poor guy, I feel for him.

    • @jeremyrdlamaxima7052
      @jeremyrdlamaxima7052 4 года назад +16

      Damn I feel that I fail my first spanish test in Freshmen in HS, i know Dominican spanish but not neutro so i fail the pronunciation, and the spelling.

    • @luisfmoreno
      @luisfmoreno 4 года назад +8

      The spanish of an educated dominican person is perfectly intelligible. This is not the case with the person in this video and unfortunately the same apply for the majority of dominicans. 😞😣

    • @jeremyrdlamaxima7052
      @jeremyrdlamaxima7052 4 года назад +6

      Luis Moreno the education is Dr is not like in here but still I don’t think speaking in dialects or with a country’s slang makes you dumb or ignorant or some shit like that you feel

    • @BlackghostKiller
      @BlackghostKiller 4 года назад

      @@jeremyrdlamaxima7052 I would fail that shit too tbh lmao

  • @g88blue30
    @g88blue30 4 года назад +177

    DR, PR & CUB we are Caribbean’s and we are proud of our F**ked up Spanish lol 😅
    🇨🇺🦾🇩🇴🦾🇵🇷

    • @roaklarson9699
      @roaklarson9699 4 года назад +14

      you do not need the apostrophe in Caribbean.

    • @Zssui
      @Zssui 4 года назад +7

      🇩🇴 gang

    • @audielamayaestrada3083
      @audielamayaestrada3083 4 года назад +15

      DR Spanish:urhdhdjdjjsjsjskskskkd
      PR Spanish: I was leally tiled like vely tiled at wolk
      Cuban Spanish:(muffled voice like you got back from the dentist) o hello ol pal amigo thing

    • @raymundoramirez5450
      @raymundoramirez5450 4 года назад

      G88 Blue 🇨🇺🇨🇺✊🏽✊🏽

    • @g88blue30
      @g88blue30 4 года назад +2

      Raymundo Ramirez 💥🇩🇴✊🏽🇩🇴💥

  • @psikeiro
    @psikeiro 4 года назад +693

    It's not "fuistes", it's: "fuiste".

    • @ojberrettaberretta5314
      @ojberrettaberretta5314 4 года назад +18

      fuite in argentina lol

    • @vianjelos
      @vianjelos 4 года назад +8

      @@ojberrettaberretta5314 same in PR...I think a lot of latinos kick the S to the curb honestly...

    • @noneyabusiness6504
      @noneyabusiness6504 4 года назад +2

      @@ojberrettaberretta5314 Sonaste, mejor dicho.

    • @EddyGraphic
      @EddyGraphic 4 года назад +3

      In the DR we straight up say "Fuite" and kill the S everywhere 😂

    • @EddyGraphic
      @EddyGraphic 4 года назад +1

      Ojberretta Berretta DR too 😂 we really don't like the letter S at the end of words.

  • @Lia-vl9te
    @Lia-vl9te 4 года назад +1312

    As a Caribbean Latina, this is so draining to just watch LOL, pronouncing every letter seems... tedious.

    • @lester2588
      @lester2588 4 года назад +123

      Lissette Same here, girl. Ain’t nobody got time to pronounce ALL the letters! We’re in a hurry to get the message across, hahaha

    • @maria_dream10
      @maria_dream10 4 года назад +70

      Gracias por este comentario, es una vaina pronunciar todo.
      🇵🇷🇨🇺🇩🇴🇭🇹🇯🇲

    • @ineedmoney83
      @ineedmoney83 4 года назад +52

      That was the one thing that threw me for a loop when I first started dating a Dominican man. He never spoke the entirety of a word. And it was always so fast I'm like, hold on, speak into this translator real slow like cuz you lost me buddy! 😂😂😂😂 I'm slowly starting to learn the ebs and flows of Dominican Spanish so we can communicate better. He's learning English too. But I would never want him to lose his way of speaking. Though at times difficult to decipher, it's still pretty darn sexy to listen to. 😁

    • @omaryouesoes
      @omaryouesoes 4 года назад +31

      It is not actually hard, in formal settings we dominicans speak neutral spanish all the time.

    • @carlosm.3426
      @carlosm.3426 4 года назад +25

      upper class Puerto Ricans pronounce it very well, i think it has more to do with socio-class, rather than being from the Caribbean
      here is an example
      Dominican
      ruclips.net/video/Bud8OWfPijA/видео.html
      Puerto Rican
      ruclips.net/video/yXSY2vA3KJ0/видео.html
      Cuban
      ruclips.net/video/qPOpNTfs0yc/видео.html

  • @se5691
    @se5691 4 года назад +367

    Okay pero profe no es "fuistes", es *"fuiste tú"* 3:13

    • @EstherHermida
      @EstherHermida 4 года назад +83

      Totalmente de acuerdo. Gracias por la corrección.

    • @alalbavincerovincero
      @alalbavincerovincero 4 года назад +4

      Exacto.

    • @poly501
      @poly501 4 года назад +5

      Lo vi/escuché y me dio "rash" mental, jaja.

    • @aguilera1728
      @aguilera1728 4 года назад +4

      Por dios, vine a decir esto. Casi muero.

    • @melancholykaleidoscope2859
      @melancholykaleidoscope2859 4 года назад +7

      @@EstherHermida oiga profe tiene que hacer otro video así con Gabriel por favor . 💯

  • @UmYeaSoWhat
    @UmYeaSoWhat 4 года назад +615

    Mira, my boyfriend is Dominican and he cuts letters so often than I have a difficult time understanding other Spanish dialects since it isn’t my first language 💀 he ruined me 🤣

    • @geogmz8277
      @geogmz8277 4 года назад +20

      It really depends from what part of DR he's from.. The best speakers are from the Capital or Santiago City..

    • @UmYeaSoWhat
      @UmYeaSoWhat 4 года назад +24

      Geo Gmz él no es de ninguno de esos lugares. Honestly I love the way he speaks, it has a beautiful rhythm in my opinion ☺️ when he wants to teach me something specific, he switches to a neutral accent but like a child, I pick up on the “bad” things more easily 😝

    • @yaminanatsaret
      @yaminanatsaret 4 года назад +20

      Lol I get what you mean. I had a Dominican boyfriend and also have Puerto Rican family and it’s just weird listening to neutral version 🤣

    • @inaynaycoleman
      @inaynaycoleman 4 года назад +17

      I’m dominican and can’t understand other spanish speakers

    • @geogmz8277
      @geogmz8277 4 года назад +16

      @@UmYeaSoWhat So I guess you say "Coño" or "Vaina" every 10 sec.. 😅

  • @leons5k
    @leons5k 4 года назад +98

    " Tienes que pronunciar cada letra"
    Los chileno': Salta pal lao vieja qlia weon que xuxa si nosotro' hablamos tikitaka

    • @nicodvesta7922
      @nicodvesta7922 4 года назад +1

      Leon Salas Burgermeister 😂😂

    • @chexblu
      @chexblu 4 года назад +3

      Eso eh vedah así eh como se habla y la gente lo entiendo no hay que tar diciendo tanta palabra si igualmente se sabe lo que tu dice ya tu sabe

    • @elprofetadelaverdad6573
      @elprofetadelaverdad6573 4 года назад +1

      POH'

  • @Averia89
    @Averia89 4 года назад +129

    As a fellow Dominicano this is all too real...uno do tré!

    • @mishellrockeg7926
      @mishellrockeg7926 4 года назад +6

      Jajajajaja Sin ofender pero no son la mejor opción para alguien que quiere aprender español.

    • @alexswindles3063
      @alexswindles3063 3 года назад +1

      Un do tre kuatro nooo no asi no e

  • @EmanuelAnthonyBucio
    @EmanuelAnthonyBucio 4 года назад +225

    I’ve been sayin dijieron my whole life with that extra “i” and everyone around me says the same thing haha. 🤯🤯

    • @edwinfndz
      @edwinfndz 4 года назад +13

      It is flat out wrong kid, sorry.

    • @MattisTorede
      @MattisTorede 4 года назад +29

      Actually 'dijeron' is wrong too, we should be using the Latin 'dīxērunt'

    • @whatever5922
      @whatever5922 4 года назад +36

      Mattis Torede no seas bobo

    • @COD0790
      @COD0790 4 года назад +11

      Mattis Torede how about we use TU MALDITA MADRE. You’re really trying too hard to sound smart now.

    • @love_x_love6619
      @love_x_love6619 4 года назад +5

      @@MattisTorede ¿Para que diablos vamos a adivinar la pronunciación del latín vulgar? Además ni siquiera hay fuentes de cómo se hablaba el latín vulgar.

  • @marthalacomba3306
    @marthalacomba3306 4 года назад +32

    I love EsTer. Please make her a regular. Thank. And happy 😃 thanksgiving

  • @lebana
    @lebana 4 года назад +50

    As a Spanish teacher, this is my greatest struggle with my native speakers. Most of my students aren’t open to learning a different way of saying things and many lack a lot of vocabulary beyond basic day to day interactions. However, the students whose parents have made an effort to make sure they speak Spanish well, even regional Spanish, make a lot more progress and are my favorite to teach.

    • @flclub54
      @flclub54 4 года назад +5

      That's niiice that they're your favorite to teach 🙄

    • @Raphinhalove1
      @Raphinhalove1 4 года назад +10

      Just cause they speak regional spanish it doesn’t mean they don’t speak it well, this is insane. How they don’t speak “well” they’re own native language(?) This is very eurocentric, besides the fact that you’re probably not a native speaker yourself, so you cannot determine what’s right or wrong based on your textbook spanish.

    • @lebana
      @lebana 4 года назад +17

      @@Raphinhalove1 I am a native speaker, born and raised in Mexico actually. In fact, most of my students come from a Mexican background, and many of their parents come from towns similar to where I grew up. The type of regional Spanish I'm referring to is what we call "del rancho"...where you can have words that are very specific to that area, and many words are pronounced wrong, such as saying nadien instead of nadie, muncho instead of mucho, gomitar instead of vomitar, etc. It's not eurocentric to expect my students to improve their Spanish to a more academic level and to want to teach them the correct way to pronounce words or a different way of saying something. It's called progress and if you're offended by that, then stay with the bare minimum mentality, idc.

    • @blackened6944
      @blackened6944 4 года назад +3

      Bruh let em keep their accents neutral spanish boring as fuk 🇩🇴🇩🇴🇩🇴🇩🇴

    • @Hallandfan847
      @Hallandfan847 Год назад

      @@Raphinhalove1 exactly

  • @kashanie5414
    @kashanie5414 4 года назад +25

    🤣🤣 “hijo de la gran yegua” I wasn’t ready! No me lo esperaba!

  • @moscoquera
    @moscoquera 4 года назад +215

    neutral Spanish is like unicorns, doesn't exist.

    • @grhossweder7991
      @grhossweder7991 4 года назад +3

      exacto amigo así también paso con el latín

    • @ct5697
      @ct5697 4 года назад

      100%

    • @torta122
      @torta122 4 года назад +11

      It does. She herself says it. Removing accent and pronouncing letters. This makes it neutral for everyone to understand. If you speak with missing letters, how is that proper? I have to admit Mexicans mark all their letter, as Colombians do. However, Colombians tend to stretch the first vowel in the fist syllable in words.

    • @Pkn-tg2go
      @Pkn-tg2go 4 года назад +4

      Maybe at Spain?

    • @Noelia-of1yc
      @Noelia-of1yc 4 года назад +8

      Zukhulemto_22 haha no they are worst

  • @DeRepublicaDominican
    @DeRepublicaDominican 4 года назад +105

    Que quede claro no todos los dominicanos pronunciamos las cosas mal

    • @jeandoom6513
      @jeandoom6513 4 года назад

      Vemos

    • @santipues305
      @santipues305 4 года назад +1

      Exacto!

    • @angievaldezvizcanovaldezvi8416
      @angievaldezvizcanovaldezvi8416 4 года назад +15

      Yo soy dominicana y hablo perfectamente, en todos los países latinoamericanos hay gente que habla mal.

    • @alcruz4849
      @alcruz4849 4 года назад +1

      Para que sepan

    • @lorenzovaldez95
      @lorenzovaldez95 4 года назад +6

      Angievaldezvizcano Valdez Vizcaino Es por un asunto de regionalismo, pero tienes totalmente la razón.

  • @josephlucas8142
    @josephlucas8142 4 года назад +24

    As an italian i suffer from the same thing i speak both dialect and proper italian however i feel that everyone should know their dialect and there proper language because it is a part of your culture and your history

  • @DarkAmethystMoon
    @DarkAmethystMoon 4 года назад +7

    The sheer mix of cultures and races that make each countries Spanish should not be criticized by some “coach” or any professor. Our slang our own twist make our nations truly and authenticity ours.

    • @EstherHermida
      @EstherHermida 4 года назад +1

      Agree. I am not a professor nor a teacher, it's a habit of Spanish speakers to give titles to people that may or may not have. For instance, anyone with a B.A. or B.S. is called a "licenciado" in Mexico.
      A "dialect coach" works with actors who may or may not speak Spanish. A Dominican actor may be acting as a Mexican in a scene and s/he wants to sound more authentic; that's when the producers call in a coach. (See beautiful Dominican actress Dania Ramirez and Puerto Rican Shalim Ortiz in the second season of the TV series Heroes (I was their coach). See William Levy in Mexican telenovelas and then listen to his normal Cuban speech here. He has a very Cuban accent, yet speaks clearly. The interviewer is Jorge Ramos, a great Mexican news anchor and author, has a very clear Mexican accent. They are both speaking Spanish and understand each other. They are not using too much slang, the reason they do this is so that the audience from different countries can easily understand. ruclips.net/video/jB7tW-W8ySE/видео.html. Take a look at Adamari Lopez, a PR actress, acting in Mexican soaps. I first watched in a Mexican telenovela her when she was very young. I didn't even know she was from Puerto Rico until I heard her in an interview. That'll give you an idea why "coaches" exist. After the word "cut" is said the actor returns to being who s/he is.
      Gadiel doesn't need a "coach" because he's got his followers that love him just the way he is. He doesn't need to speak Spanish flawlessly to have appeal. In fact, that may make him even more likable. But he's an entertainer, most of us are not and we may be dealing with different parameters.
      Living in the US allows us to meet Spanish speakers from 20 different Spanish speaking countries. Surprisingly we can all understand each other if we keep it "neutral". But the funny thing is that if you live in one country, you'll never know you speak differently. It's only when you come to this melting pot that you realize that not everyone speaks the same way. For me language and the way people speak is fun. I'm a language nerd. I'm a word gatherer. I don't lecture, I share what I've learned.
      Of course, it's a lot of fun to hear regionalisms because of the different meanings in each country. These are fun slang words to test your friends in: bicho, concha, guagua, bollo, papaya.

    • @jlhabitan50
      @jlhabitan50 4 года назад +1

      She wasn't being critical. Gadiel was speaking a form of Spanish that is unique to his country of origin that may not necessarily be understood by fellow Spanish speakers, especially those who are not exposed to it the same way Colombian, Venezuelan, Castilian and Mexican Spanish have in media, which in fairness to those aforementioned varieties, also have their own localisms that may be proven problematic to fully comprehend (Like I don't understand why some Mexicans end their sentences with güey). If I were from say, Cuba, and I happen to be in Argentina or Uruguay for business, I probably would not be able to understand right away the locals' colloquialisms, let alone their accent (with their doble L's having a -sh sound), and likewise for them to me.
      Both Gadiel and Esther had a lot of fun doing this and very educational on the part of Gadiel.
      FYI, I'm learning Spanish hehe.

    • @EstherHermida
      @EstherHermida 4 года назад +1

      @@jlhabitan50 Thank you for explaining it beautifully. Learning the slang will be a fun part of language learning as you advance in your studies.

    • @jlhabitan50
      @jlhabitan50 4 года назад +1

      @@EstherHermida You're welcome. :)

  • @G60J60F80
    @G60J60F80 4 года назад +13

    Some of his mistakes were direct translations from English. And the dijieron thing is just regularization of an irregular verb, idk why she said she didn't know why he was doing that.

  • @heyalfonso4844
    @heyalfonso4844 4 года назад +30

    Si quieren aprender español van a tener que aprender a entender los cientos de acentos diferentes, eso es lo que hace único al idioma :) Su diversidad de acentos, al final solo con escuchar una frase puedes identificar la nacionalidad de una persona

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican 4 года назад +60

    This needs to happen with Cuban Spanish. Gadiel is awesome

  • @lpsalsaman
    @lpsalsaman 4 года назад +35

    Para mi el Español neutro es cuando la persona, no importa de que país de habla española sea, si habla el idioma sin su acento local y sin usar palabras que son "argot/jerga" o en Ingles "slang" pues todos nos entenderíamos mucho mejor. Bueno ni los mismos Españoles tratan de hablar el idioma en forma neutral! Bueno el vid fue bien entretenido, así que hacia adelante mi gente!

    • @cpelaezd
      @cpelaezd 4 года назад

      Creo lo mismo que tú. Aquí en comentarios de otras personas veo que confunden Español neutro con acento neutro, dos cosas que son muy diferentes. En el caso del segundo si diría que no existe, uno diría que trata de hablar en acento neutro, pero siempre uno logra reconocer el origen.

    • @lpsalsaman
      @lpsalsaman 4 года назад

      @@cpelaezd Exacto! Suave Bro!

  • @shanaescott6328
    @shanaescott6328 4 года назад +61

    As a Jamaican I imagine this is what it would be like if we taught Creole in schools..endless corrections lol

    • @joshualofton5793
      @joshualofton5793 4 года назад +5

      Shanae Scott haha. Exactly. I’m Jamaican and Dominican. I barely speak any of the three languages right. 😂😂

    • @ninpobudo3876
      @ninpobudo3876 4 года назад

      I'm a Louisiana-Creole and to a French person; we are the Jamaicans to French (accent wise.) Nuff respect to Jamaica 🇯🇲

    • @gcc2313
      @gcc2313 4 года назад

      Is jamaican creole/patios not taught in school? My creole is taught in school.

    • @ninpobudo3876
      @ninpobudo3876 4 года назад

      @@gcc2313 you must be a Haitian 🇭🇹???

    • @shanaescott6328
      @shanaescott6328 4 года назад

      @@gcc2313 No we use english in school. Some colleges teach it as a course though.

  • @queenjkings1104
    @queenjkings1104 4 года назад +16

    Votemos por más clases de esta índole. 👏👏👏👏👏

  • @genesismedina6505
    @genesismedina6505 4 года назад +8

    I love Pero Like, but no, I am Dominican, and I was born and raised there. I literally get so mad when someone corrects my Spanish because, in a way, it is like taking some part of my identity away. I understand that the goal is for all Latinos to understand each other but, instead of understanding each other, why not learn from one another, embrace our difference? I think it is beautiful. My Dominican Spanish is the product of my African ancestry, White ancestry, Indigenous ancestry, and Asian ancestry; DR. is also located in the Caribbean, this location plays a significant role in the way we speak as well as our ancestry because it talks about how language has developed over time and how different groups of our ancestors played in role in it. Therefore, there is no need to correct someone's Spanish; do not make it something is not. Let it be. I DO want to struggle with my Spanish, let them, language is something people can use to learn from one another. NO Spanish from ANY country should ever have to be corrected.

  • @NibbleNips88
    @NibbleNips88 4 года назад +106

    Imagine the person editing this video. 😂

  • @natanaelarias4714
    @natanaelarias4714 4 года назад +28

    We Dominicans are known for cutting letters from words, en verdad it's really difficult.
    for my fellow Dominicans out there, do you know people that say "habemos" instead of "hay"?

    • @imalexaliaandkpopsnatchedm7948
      @imalexaliaandkpopsnatchedm7948 4 года назад +4

      🙋🏾‍♀️🙋🏾‍♀️ her Spanish was confusing me😂💀💀

    • @natanaelarias4714
      @natanaelarias4714 4 года назад +3

      @@imalexaliaandkpopsnatchedm7948 feel you 😅

    • @PH7018c
      @PH7018c 4 года назад

      Habemos.. hay.. ¿a que te refieres?

    • @omaryouesoes
      @omaryouesoes 4 года назад +7

      Qué va, en situaciones formales uno habla lo más neutro posible en nuestro país.

    • @user-cx2zt6mh4c
      @user-cx2zt6mh4c 4 года назад +2

      Yo odio ese "habemos" y el "ello hay" 😂.

  • @andresc5915
    @andresc5915 4 года назад +12

    I still don’t see the problem with Dominican spanish. I personally feel it flows better. But I don’t understand why he has to change the way he speaks... if he slowed down a bit, you could probably understand him better.

    • @octpod3923
      @octpod3923 4 года назад +1

      They don't pronounce the words correctly.

    • @andresc5915
      @andresc5915 4 года назад +7

      OCT POD “correctly” is relative. Brits don’t correct Americans on how to say certain words. It’s relative and whatever is more comfortable for the person. You know what I mean?

    • @robertcuevas3602
      @robertcuevas3602 4 года назад

      OCT POD we do

  • @karlag7950
    @karlag7950 4 года назад +16

    So refreshing to hear “neutral”.

  • @MsJanetWood
    @MsJanetWood 4 года назад +12

    Caribbean accents are so cute! 🌴

  • @bellathrone1223
    @bellathrone1223 4 года назад +157

    I am from spain and this made me laugh so hard jajajaja.

    • @sandru42
      @sandru42 4 года назад +14

      @Daniel Moreno bc it's not "neutro". I mean, It sounds VERY Latin (which isnt bad) but for exemple, they pronounce the "c" like an "s".

    • @halomaniatico100
      @halomaniatico100 4 года назад +4

      @@sandru42 "s" is more clear to hear than the "z' sound

    • @sin4503
      @sin4503 4 года назад +5

      Tu no puedes reirte, tienes que verlo y aprender, te hace mucha falta!

    • @sandru42
      @sandru42 4 года назад +2

      @@sin4503 por?

    • @victorius6635
      @victorius6635 4 года назад +14

      @@sandru42 Bueno, teniendo en Cuenta que solo el 15% (me he inventado El porcentaje pero mas o menos) de Los Hispanoablantes en el Mundo hablamos con la "c" de España creo que lo neutro seria Como lo habla LA mujer del video...

  • @rodriant55
    @rodriant55 4 года назад +11

    I love Dominican Spanish and her neutral Spanish is so nice too lol

  • @athread1529
    @athread1529 4 года назад +11

    This well always be true every Spanish from every country we'll be said and spoken and be a different meaning.

  • @v0calbeatzlaughs
    @v0calbeatzlaughs 4 года назад +77

    If we’re being honest, I feel like most native speakers occasionally drop a -d or -s.

    • @Kaisforeignadventures
      @Kaisforeignadventures 4 года назад +4

      Not in the north of Spain, but in the south and in the Canary Islands they do and I can't stand it.

    • @noface____
      @noface____ 4 года назад +3

      Not Peruvians

    • @ElSauxy02
      @ElSauxy02 4 года назад +11

      v0calbeatzlaughs Mexicans don’t do that :/

    • @graaaavityy1129
      @graaaavityy1129 4 года назад

      @@noface____ I have to disagree with that

    • @ramonanaya6236
      @ramonanaya6236 4 года назад +1

      Siii especially los caribeños from the people I know what I hear but Mexicans do it too so I know it's not just them😁

  • @adriyk
    @adriyk 4 года назад +13

    It’s interesting how we mispronounce some words by dropping letters, uste, whilst adding letters to others, e.g., fuisteS.

  • @imcaligirl1
    @imcaligirl1 4 года назад +5

    I’m first generation here in the USA and I kinda want to move to Mexico when I have children so they can be in touch with their heritage as much as I was growing up.

  • @deedas
    @deedas 4 года назад +56

    Wait wait wait, it’s not dijieron???????

    • @ckhrisloks85
      @ckhrisloks85 4 года назад +18

      Lol I've been saying that shit wrong my whole life! 😂

    • @PH7018c
      @PH7018c 4 года назад +20

      Estudien sus verbos..

    • @claramoran
      @claramoran 4 года назад +1

      LOL MEEEE

    • @YesToSayYes
      @YesToSayYes 4 года назад

      Look it up in the dle.rae.es/ dictionary.

    • @richardfeliz1508
      @richardfeliz1508 4 года назад +2

      Yo siempre e dicho Dijieron 😌😌😌😌 I thought 💭 I was correct my whole life 😂😂

  • @renzoqu
    @renzoqu 4 года назад +66

    is this a joke? her spanish is spanish from televisa XXDD

    • @carlosdgutierrez6570
      @carlosdgutierrez6570 4 года назад +1

      well, yeah, the cea televisa of televisa developed the neutral spanish

    • @sai9507
      @sai9507 3 года назад

      yeah, strong Betty la fea vibes

  • @malima9475
    @malima9475 4 года назад +41

    Why would someone want to sound less dominican? their spanish is so damn sexy. love you dominican people ❤️

    • @luisannydelanuez334
      @luisannydelanuez334 3 года назад +2

      We love you 🇩🇴

    • @WarrenFearchild
      @WarrenFearchild 3 дня назад

      He needs to learn neutral Spanish just like all Dominicans learn in school, he doesn’t bc he grew up
      In the US, and didn’t go to school in DR.

  • @maciel0726
    @maciel0726 4 года назад +10

    No wonder every time I write dijieron it says it’s misspelled 😂 but dijeron takes much more effort to say and remember!

  • @alej9895
    @alej9895 4 года назад +10

    This is like watching Steve Martin in the Pink Panther saying "I would like to buy a hamburger"

  • @stateofdreaming
    @stateofdreaming 4 года назад +5

    2:02 "entre la una y lah doh de la mañana", wow so much for a neutral Spanish expert asking the other person (literally 5 seconds ago) to "pronounce every single letter".

  • @doigtsfrancaisfroids3962
    @doigtsfrancaisfroids3962 4 года назад +13

    As a Cajun French speaker from Louisiana, I can speak for all French Canadians in general. Pronouncing everything is way too tedious and elongated anyways. I'm not always trying to write a poem. I'm just trying to get my message across. It's almost a joke that French learners will learn French from the textbooks only to realize no one speaks that elegantly in real life. We can, but what's the point? xD

  • @colombo4000
    @colombo4000 4 года назад +10

    Creo que algo "facil" que tiene el español es, como han explicado, que toda letra se pronuncia. Una persona con suficiente nivel de gramatica deberia hablarlo sin mayor problema. Otra cosa es el día a día.

  • @michiiwz583
    @michiiwz583 4 года назад +11

    Básicamente enseñan a Gadiel a hablar sin choperías :V

  • @anttoniapaz9471
    @anttoniapaz9471 4 года назад +41

    I like the way she says all the “s” I’m Chilean, so I can’t do that

    • @starlord7916
      @starlord7916 4 года назад +1

      Anttonia Paz como que no se puede Xd

    • @AlexChannel7
      @AlexChannel7 4 года назад +1

      @@starlord7916 obvio se puede

    • @bakaotani12
      @bakaotani12 4 года назад

      Y yo que pensaba que el chileno tenía uno de los acentos más neutros de Latinoamérica (?)

    • @AlexChannel7
      @AlexChannel7 4 года назад +3

      @@bakaotani12 es de los más difíciles jajaja

    • @anttoniapaz9471
      @anttoniapaz9471 4 года назад +3

      HaeSoo12 Nooo hablamos muy mal jdjsjs a veces no nos entendemos ni nosotros mismos

  • @juanmanuelmoramontes3883
    @juanmanuelmoramontes3883 4 года назад +2

    I'm a Colombian who's basically learning English and lives in his mother country, and let me tell you that your Spanish sounds completely native, I hardly found something not common from natives pronunciation in yours, which is amazing, great video by the way!

  • @ESUSAMEX
    @ESUSAMEX 4 года назад +6

    Whenever I have to speak to a Latino in Spanish, I always ask where they are from first because I need to prepare myself for the dropped or swallowed letters. Dominicans, Cubans and Puerto Ricans are the toughest to understand.

    • @margaritakleinman5701
      @margaritakleinman5701 3 года назад

      I agree, especially when they talk fast. I am used to Mexican Spanish, it doesnt have all the dropped letters.

  • @NibbleNips88
    @NibbleNips88 4 года назад +49

    Please do this with Salvadorans.

  • @yooshairpin2538
    @yooshairpin2538 4 года назад +29

    Do this with puerto ricans

  • @pedrod6768
    @pedrod6768 4 года назад +9

    I'm from Spain🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸, and I think that the thing that makes Spanish unique is the difference between the accents (or dialects), if every one starts to speak with "neutral Spanish", that thing is lost. Every country should speak with their own accent. 🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸

    • @ninpobudo3876
      @ninpobudo3876 4 года назад +1

      I'm from America, and I'm a Louisiana Creole, and I speak Louisiana-Creole French 🇫🇷... Just imagine what the French say about our French lol 😆

    • @ximenadiaz8076
      @ximenadiaz8076 4 года назад

      👏👏👏👏👏

    • @maiyuru
      @maiyuru 4 года назад

      es increíble como hay gente tan estúpida que no comprende que el acento neutro es el utilizado en el doblaje, hecho así para que todo Latinoamérica entienda, si no, habría que hacer un doblaje para cada país del continente, es el español del México de los años 40, limpio, claro de entender para los extranjeros, totalmente seseante, diferenciándolo del acento español.

  • @jo3984
    @jo3984 3 года назад +4

    As a dominican THE ANGER THAT I HAVE WHEN SHE SPEAKS this whole time im over here correcting her this is draining 👀👀😬

  • @ShaniTheBurningTree
    @ShaniTheBurningTree 4 года назад +93

    This is like watching a deep southerner speak the Queen's English... yikes

    • @mrjamila88
      @mrjamila88 4 года назад +1

      Graffiti Nefertiti lol yes 😂

    • @sharonreynolds1513
      @sharonreynolds1513 4 года назад +9

      Ironically I just learned that deep southern accent is more closely related to a British accent. But it's spoken more slowly. Here is one of the videos I watched on the subject: ruclips.net/video/XPfOL4wUuMU/видео.html

    • @ramonanaya6236
      @ramonanaya6236 4 года назад

      Jaja mmmm

    • @ninpobudo3876
      @ninpobudo3876 4 года назад +1

      @@sharonreynolds1513 You should check out the Virgina settlers! Their English sounds tyre closet to British-English but with a twisted! I can't understand them mofo's for nothing!

    • @sharonreynolds1513
      @sharonreynolds1513 4 года назад

      @@ninpobudo3876 haha I will! Thanks :)

  • @ismaelsantana8251
    @ismaelsantana8251 4 года назад +14

    me being Dominican and watching this getting a headache😭

  • @yafavbrujita762
    @yafavbrujita762 4 года назад +115

    This is like a white person teaching a black persons how to speak “proper” English instead of Ebonics 😂

    • @Ronaldo-rt7hl
      @Ronaldo-rt7hl 4 года назад +4

      Who’s NaeNae lol just realized that and it’s not happening 😂

    • @1dogissky
      @1dogissky 3 года назад +3

      Fr pq recuerdo cuando this español blanquito guy told me why do my people not speak properly when I said “hablamo” and I felt like it was a microagression 😭😭

    • @Godlybuilding
      @Godlybuilding 3 года назад +14

      Spanish or English, niggas will remix and make their own lingo. ✊🏿❤️😆

    • @MaureenMurphy_
      @MaureenMurphy_ 3 года назад +2

      Highkey why I wanna learn Dominican Spanish! I already speak AAVE why not speak another dialect that's considered improper? 😌

    • @SoupBone-bp1qk
      @SoupBone-bp1qk 3 года назад +3

      I don't agree. Blacks know how to code switch. Many choose to speak slang or proper English depending on the situation. Its a strength in my view.

  • @bigdezol
    @bigdezol 4 года назад +9

    This video perfectly negates the argument that native Spanish speakers--whatever the dialect--who go to college to study Spanish are taking the easy way out.

    • @MarioRodriguez-gr8wc
      @MarioRodriguez-gr8wc 4 года назад

      C R huh?

    • @bigdezol
      @bigdezol 4 года назад

      @C R, spoken like a person who doesn't understand linguistics. No one is born knowing the grammar of a language; you have to learn it.

    • @MarioRodriguez-gr8wc
      @MarioRodriguez-gr8wc 4 года назад

      C R what the hell is correct Spanish? Do you think Latin Americans are being taught in incorrect Spanish at school? The distinction between the C S and Z have nothing to do with writing correctly. 😂

    • @bigdezol
      @bigdezol 4 года назад

      @C R, Imma keep it real with you chief, I'm not reading all that.

  • @sashasscorner
    @sashasscorner 4 года назад +8

    Tienes que pronunciar todas las palabras
    All Latin America: lol

    • @razeru3386
      @razeru3386 4 года назад +1

      Sara Obando En Colombia en muchas regiones se pronuncian todas. Cuando nos acercamos hacia caribe o al pacifico el acento es muy similar al de los cubanos, dominicanos y demás caribeños.

  • @Dualidity
    @Dualidity 4 года назад +7

    It hurts me because like he keeps saying the wrong word like my Dominican classmate even when corrected.

  • @robertlee3584
    @robertlee3584 4 года назад +4

    This is very educational but I love my Caribbean Spanish. It has a flow and uniqueness to it. But I also love other countries dialects as well. Everyone needs to understand that is one way to speak Spanish. Part of the beauty of Spanish is the way its spoken around the world. Here in Texas, there's always someone correcting our Spanish and saying Caribbean Spanish is not real Spanish. Well enough my tangent. I love the video.

  • @Jordansitou
    @Jordansitou 4 года назад +5

    Coach de español dictando la frase "Nos dijeron que FUISTE-S tu" .-.

  •  4 года назад +7

    Not all Dominicans speak the same way 😂 we have different accents within the D.R. and some of us speak neutral.

  • @gothhy
    @gothhy 4 года назад +11

    But like what if he taught her though lol the Dominican accent is valid too

  • @flupe_calitos8493
    @flupe_calitos8493 4 года назад +11

    En el español neutral las c y las z como suenan no como "s" ejemplo: "Generación"(español neutro) / "Generasión" ( español latino)

    • @mcauliffehalleysalazarcama1892
      @mcauliffehalleysalazarcama1892 4 года назад +1

      ruclips.net/video/BmR2nHqIzTI/видео.html

    • @edhunter5603
      @edhunter5603 4 года назад +3

      Hablamos de América, no de la península.

    • @maiyuru
      @maiyuru 4 года назад +1

      es increíble como hay gente tan estúpida que no comprende que el acento neutro es el utilizado en el doblaje, hecho así para que todo Latinoamérica entienda, si no, habría que hacer un doblaje para cada país del continente, es el español del México de los años 40, limpio, claro de entender para los extranjeros, totalmente seseante, diferenciándolo del acento español.

    • @jacoboarca8516
      @jacoboarca8516 4 года назад

      Español latino es la lengua en si, es una lengua latina. Es español americano y español europeo. Los latinos son del Lazio en Italia.

  • @jenifercastorena2351
    @jenifercastorena2351 4 года назад +5

    I love this! BUT we all know we all speak slang Spanish especially en el rancho 😂

  • @grandpatzer
    @grandpatzer 4 года назад +7

    Mare mía que en algunas partes de la mismísima España, por ejemplo en Andalucía y en las Canarias, dirían “¿Onde taba uté entre la una y la dó de la mañana, tío joer?!”

    • @grandpatzer
      @grandpatzer 4 года назад +1

      corle1 Gracias por esa información! Muy bonita tu patria. Hace unos años visité Punta Cana de vacaciones. Qué recuerdos. Un saludo a todos los buenos dominicanos.

    • @dantedante839
      @dantedante839 4 года назад

      @@grandpatzer Para añadir... Lo único que "desminicaniza" tu ejemplo es la parte de "tío joder" que en dominicano sería "loco" o "mi loco".

    • @dantedante839
      @dantedante839 4 года назад

      @corle1 Para el caso de República Dominicana al menos 95% eran andaluces/canarios y la otra minoría era VASCA. Aún existen registros como "abur" que viene del vasco "agur", que significa "adiós". Esto se dice en el sur dominicano.

    • @grandpatzer
      @grandpatzer 4 года назад

      dante dante Vascos hay en toa parte jaja

    • @dantedante839
      @dantedante839 4 года назад

      @@grandpatzer NO LO CREO...

  • @carolinamarzbookslibros
    @carolinamarzbookslibros 4 года назад +7

    I love this channel!! But I am mad she said “que no suene tan dominicano” lady not every Dominican speak this way, I mean wtf.

  • @jdn42y11
    @jdn42y11 4 года назад +11

    All this language usage talk ,makes me think of a book I read a few years back. Mind Language by Albert Merle Brothers
    Try to avoid using not .
    Like instead of saying,”I do not consent” say perhaps ” I refuse to consent.” Hehehehe...Usted is the same as "USte" in the public school of the US!

  • @xxdidxx8744
    @xxdidxx8744 4 года назад +5

    My mom was correcting me the other day on how it’s Dijeron and not Dijieron but i probably won’t stop saying Dijieron... it just sounds so right

    • @whatever5922
      @whatever5922 4 года назад +1

      Berryxsubliminals it sounds naco

    • @mixtapemania6769
      @mixtapemania6769 4 года назад

      Estoy aprendiendo Español y creía que fue dijieron también.

    • @xxdidxx8744
      @xxdidxx8744 4 года назад

      Mixtape Mania No es una gran diferencia yo lo sigo diciendo

    • @whatever5922
      @whatever5922 4 года назад

      Berryxsubliminals por qué no mejorar?

    • @xxdidxx8744
      @xxdidxx8744 4 года назад

      cellophaneboy se me olvida y lo digo automáticamente pero talves un día

  • @orzygabi7427
    @orzygabi7427 4 года назад +4

    I love Gadiel !

  • @carlosvelasquez1277
    @carlosvelasquez1277 4 года назад +3

    Yo diría que es muy favorable el que tuvo la oportunidad de estudiar en países latinoamericanos. Aunque con cada profesor, se aprende basado en la colegiatura del profesor. Soy feliz saber que muchos de los jóvenes de hoy día, tienen la satisfacción y orgullo de haberlo aprendido de sus padres. Por supuesto hay que tomar en cuenta que cada padre/madre tiene su propio nivel de estudio, mencionó esto con todo el respecto que se merecen los padres por educar a sus hijos. Muchas felicitaciones por ese logro para ambos, el padre o la madre y el hijo/a.
    Gadiel me parece que eres un buen detective.

  • @manny1up
    @manny1up 4 года назад +45

    Slang is used in regular Dominican conversations a lot more frequently than it is in most other Spanish dialects. it's that simple.

    • @ojberrettaberretta5314
      @ojberrettaberretta5314 4 года назад +4

      not more than in argentina tho

    • @crazy4beatles
      @crazy4beatles 4 года назад +12

      I worked with majority Dominican clients but have to say Chilenos drop so much slang. Argentinos don’t have much experience with.

    • @ojberrettaberretta5314
      @ojberrettaberretta5314 4 года назад +16

      @@crazy4beatles chileans just dont talk properly they all have almost a speech impediment

    • @franny_gp_draylist688
      @franny_gp_draylist688 4 года назад +6

      @@ojberrettaberretta5314 Ouch. I agree with you, but, not everyone in the whole country talks like that
      Greetings :D

    • @beepbeepboopboop7857
      @beepbeepboopboop7857 4 года назад +8

      manny1up That’s true but saying “usté” rather than “usted” isn’t slang, it’s incorrect Spanish.

  • @ro5396
    @ro5396 4 года назад +2

    omg the dijieron is such a struggle for me lmaooo i was just as confused as gadiel

  • @A-ID-A-M
    @A-ID-A-M 4 года назад +5

    She needs to write a book teaching neutral spanish words to nonnative speakers.

    • @solarmoth4628
      @solarmoth4628 4 года назад +3

      If you take spanish classes, you learn neutral spanish. you could buy any standard spainish textbook

    • @A-ID-A-M
      @A-ID-A-M 4 года назад +1

      @Curelia kinda. Idk. In my spanish class we learned very mexican spanish

    • @A-ID-A-M
      @A-ID-A-M 4 года назад

      @Curelia reguardless she seems like shed be a great teacher

    • @whatever5922
      @whatever5922 4 года назад

      Aimed2Kill Mexican Spanish is by far the most neutral

    • @MarioRodriguez-gr8wc
      @MarioRodriguez-gr8wc 4 года назад

      The book is called a dictionary. 😂

  • @jayjaymanu
    @jayjaymanu 4 года назад +9

    0:39 it's "que no suene tan Dominicano" not tanto

  • @vicgr5159
    @vicgr5159 4 года назад +2

    El fuisteSSSS me mató jajajaja pero luego lo corrigieron! well done!

  • @simondiaz1597
    @simondiaz1597 4 года назад +7

    Y decir “diheron” también es algo que se puede considerar local no? Hay otros países que la lengua se acerca más al paladar al pronunciar la J

    • @TakittyLove
      @TakittyLove 4 года назад +1

      Exacto. Si vas más al centro, la J es más "aspirada"(a excepción de MX) si bajas al sur es más neutral pero si ya vas muy al sur la J es más cerrada(CHILE) donde la lengua se aplasta contra el paladar para pronunciarla. Ejm: Neutral: Agenda (a-jen-da)
      Central America: Agenda (a-hen-da)
      Chile: Agenda (a-jien-da)

    • @KK-lo8ki
      @KK-lo8ki 4 года назад

      Jackeline Castañeda En Mexico la J es aspirada a excepción de la Ciudad de México he notado que no aspiran la J.

    • @aldairlopez8563
      @aldairlopez8563 4 года назад

      @@KK-lo8ki en México la j no es aspirada yo he vivido en varias partes de mi país por Dios, primero enseñando sobre ensordecimiento vocalico y ahora aseguras que aspiramos la j? No hables sin conocer por favor.

  • @iceling01
    @iceling01 4 года назад +6

    Cant wait for the Puerto Rican Edition Lol 🇵🇷🤦🏿‍♂️

  • @duvar3176
    @duvar3176 4 года назад +12

    I can not believe she said “FUISTES” 😂😂

    • @EstherHermida
      @EstherHermida 4 года назад +4

      Terrible, isn't it? A faux pas for sure.

    • @armidahernandez358
      @armidahernandez358 4 года назад

      Hi Esther. I stumbled upon these videos. Honestly, since I met you long ago in LA, to my ears your Spanish always sounded tinged with a Cuban accent. In this video I still perceive it that way. That's an observation, not a criticism. But I'm sure my Spanish sounds strange to many people with its Mexican-American influence. Anyways, the videos are entertaining and you look fantastic.

  • @luisdmejias05
    @luisdmejias05 4 года назад +2

    I love her

  • @KainChase
    @KainChase 4 года назад +1

    This is great. You guys should have a video of Latinos learning Madrid accent and slang. I can only imagine

  • @mickeyisareader
    @mickeyisareader 4 года назад +7

    I learning using Duolingo

    • @hubertbieniek5888
      @hubertbieniek5888 4 года назад

      MeChelleMyBell Taylor tú learning que

    • @kelviannaepperson3677
      @kelviannaepperson3677 4 года назад +1

      I have used it before but I didn't get past what I already knew before I stopped but I like it

    • @sage7296
      @sage7296 4 года назад +1

      Make sure you practice with other recourses.I love duolingo but it can’t be the only thing you use

    • @kelviannaepperson3677
      @kelviannaepperson3677 4 года назад +1

      @@sage7296 yeah after duolingo I studied more in college just because I wanted to I had taken it for 3 years in hs

  • @mikemiguel5073
    @mikemiguel5073 4 года назад +9

    I also say dijieron 🇬🇹🇬🇹🇬🇹🇬🇹😅😅

    • @elvisherrera12
      @elvisherrera12 4 года назад

      Mike tubehd dijeron and I’m also 🇬🇹🇬🇹🇬🇹

  • @ajachaney37
    @ajachaney37 4 года назад +1

    I really enjoy this. I’ve been trying to figure out which accent of Spanish I would like to adapt to but I found it a little difficult because I would just like to be understood by all instead of having to learn a certain way to speak. So I think learning neutral Spanish will be best for me ( and i am about to work in a restaurant where Spanish speaking costumers come in so I would like to be able to communicate effectively with them)

  • @Luis-ng4fb
    @Luis-ng4fb 4 года назад +1

    Hacen mucha falta este tipo de cursos, para mejorar la comunicación internacional en español, me encantó!

  • @jeni150023
    @jeni150023 4 года назад +5

    Gadiel's DR Spanish has actually messed my broken Mexican Spanish more than it already was because using domincan pronunciations are a whole lot easier than pronouncing words correctly. 🤣🤣😖

  • @catherineortega7964
    @catherineortega7964 4 года назад +37

    No, No, No... to her towards the end saying that getting rid of our native dialects and accents is needed for better communication.NO!
    My Puerto Rican Spanish (and many other dialects in Latin America) is mixed with beautiful Native and African words and sounds. To call for such a move is to erase the terrible history as to why we even speak Spanish, to begin with.
    This is a dangerous step to take.
    There is nothing more beautiful than speaking with others and realizing we use a different word for something and why. It's beautiful, not difficult. Dialects are important.

    • @saseenthira3105
      @saseenthira3105 4 года назад +1

      Catherine Ortega 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽❤️

    • @pr_tr4p_g4wd20
      @pr_tr4p_g4wd20 4 года назад +3

      Catherine Ortega So true could you imagine if we all spoke the same kind of Spanish their would be no flavor in the way we speak and that’s part of the beauty of Latin American and Caribbean Spanish the different accents and slangs and cultures that we come from and the mixture of different cultures that influenced our Spanish too.😔🙏🏽😁👍🏽

    • @jennifermoreno717
      @jennifermoreno717 4 года назад +7

      I don't think the linguistic consultant is saying to do this for the everyday person. I believe she's specifying for those who are Spanish actors, travel agents, international business people, etc and every one else who is required to neutralize their form of Spanish in order to communicate.
      I understand what you're saying though. I speak Mexican Spanish which I'll be able to communicate with anyone else who speaks Spanish (even if it can be different), though there are some words upon which have different meanings in the difference of Spanish.

    • @pr_tr4p_g4wd20
      @pr_tr4p_g4wd20 4 года назад +1

      Jennifer Moreno I don’t think she mentioned that in the video though she mentioned neutral Spanish only though so that’s why I drew my conclusion LOL.😁

    • @adriyk
      @adriyk 4 года назад +3

      Catherine Ortega her comment was in regards to communication. If the various dialects continue their organic evolution, they will become mutually unintelligible as they will become separate languages. That’s what happened with the Romance languages.

  • @BeebeeSnow
    @BeebeeSnow 4 года назад

    I loved this episode. I’ve seen your stuff before but today I finally subscribed to this channel. ¡Excelente!

  • @eliz222003
    @eliz222003 3 года назад

    What a beautiful video… 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾 Muchas gracias por compartirlo con nosotros… 🙌🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾

  • @Bernal00
    @Bernal00 4 года назад +9

    SuperHolly habla mucho mejor el Español Neutro que esta "maestra"

  • @Anabel30100
    @Anabel30100 4 года назад +23

    Lol that’s cool but I love the way us Carribeños sound when we speak Spanish

  • @kaili6719
    @kaili6719 2 года назад +1

    i wish she would stop saying “correct it” and say something like “neutralize it” bcoz it’s still correct

  • @andresc.6561
    @andresc.6561 4 года назад +2

    This is just how we all speak in Bogotá