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English & Spanish:
A Language Comparison

     Presented By:
    Carinne Karlick
BACKGROUND
The proximity of Latin America to the United States
    and the growing influx of Latinos to this country
 have given a progressively more important place to
     the Spanish language here in the United States
 (Farrell and Farrell, 2004). A result of this influx is
                           the increasing population
                           of ESL students speaking
                     Spanish as a first language (L1).
A COMPARISON OF ENGLISH AND SPANISH
        ENGLISH                              SPANISH
Modern English is a language that      The Spanish language is one of the
has developed over time and has      Romance languages developed from
evolved over 3 historical time        Latin (Pinker, 1994). There is some
periods: Old English, Middle                disparity in the vocabulary and
English and Modern English            pronunciation of Spanish spoken in
(Freeman &Freeman, 2004).                Spain, but the Spanish spoken in
The English language has             Latin America and other parts of the
borrowed some of its words from     world is derivative of Castillian, which
Spanish, like banana, and orange    is a dialect of the Spanish province of
(Pinker, 1994).                          Castile (Farrell and Farrell, 2004)
THE ALPHABET
 No alphabet has a one to one correspondence
between letters and sounds (Freeman and
Freeman, 2004). The English alphabet consists of
26 letters and the Spanish alphabet contains 30
letters which includes the 26 letters of the
English alphabet, as well as a few groupings
of English letters that create
additional sounds
including: ch, ll, rr,
and n with a tilde over it.
SOUNDS
English has a ch sound but it is the letter /c/ and /h/ that
when combined together form a digraph. In Spanish the
ch is its own letter. Other English digraphs are /sh/ and /
th/. There is no /th/ digraph in Spanish. The Spanish
letter /h/ is silent and the /j/ has a sound closer to the
English letter /h/ (Freeman and Freeman, 2004). The
Spanish letter /y/ can sound like a traditional /y/ sound in
English like in the name Yolanda or the Spanish /y/ can
sound like the English /j/ the Spanish name Jarielys. The
/rr/ is rolled off the tongue for the /r/ sound.
The Spanish /b/ and /v/ have the same sound
 and are pronounced like the English /b/.
PUNCUATION

     There are similarities in punctuation between
       English and Spanish. For example, periods,
 commas, colons, semicolons are used in the same
   manner. There are differences also. In English,
question marks and exclamation points are used at
  end of the sentence. In Spanish, these marks are
            written at the beginning, with the mark
                being upside-down as well as at the
                   end with the mark right side up.
NOUNS
 Nouns are used in the same way in both English and
Spanish. In English, some nouns are considered to
have gender to identify only if something is male or
female, for example, man and woman or boy and girl.
And English, gender typically makes no difference
unless there are two forms of the word like, actor and
actress, for example. In Spanish all nouns are either
masculine or feminine. This is important to
understand because the determiners in Spanish
change according to the gender of the noun that it
refers to (Farrell and Farrell, 2004).
NOUNS….continued
 A determiner is a functional category that serves as a
specifier of a noun (O’Grady, 2005). Some examples
of specifiers in English are: a, the, these. Two singular
    determiners in Spanish is the feminine la or the
masculine el. In Spanish there are plural determiners
    as well, which are las and los. Nouns also have
singular and plural forms adding -s or –es in addition
       to the irregular nouns in both languages.
 The preposition /de/ forms possession in Spanish
   whereas English nouns have a possessive case
              formed by adding -’s or -s’.
PRONOUNS
 Examples of English pronouns are: he, she, or we.
Some Spanish pronouns are: el (he), ella (she),
nosotros/as (we). Pronouns, like nouns, have gender,
number and case and they change depending on the
person like first, second, or third person (Farrell and
Farrell, 2004). Personal pronouns can be used as
subjects or objects. In Spanish there are three persons
and there is another alternative of using the familiar you
(tu) and polite (usted) forms (Farrell and Farrell, 2004).
In English, subject pronouns go before the verb in the
sentence. In Spanish, subject, direct object, and
indirect object pronouns go before the verb.
VERBS
   In English, most verbs have four tenses: infinitive, simple
 past, past participle, present participle (Farrell and Farrell,
 2004). English does not normally conjugate verbs because
 there is only one inflected ending by adding /s/ to the third
 person singular of the present tense. In English some verb
  tenses need special endings: -ed, -en, or -ing. Some verbs
   require auxiliary verbs like: do, did, have, has, would, or
     could. There are irregular verbs in both English and
Spanish. Spanish verbs are conjugated and endings are used
to indicate the appropriate tense like: a, as, aste, e, or ando.
In Spanish, various verbs use auxiliary verbs too like: cocer
   (to bake) or bailar (to dance). In Spanish, verbs need to
 agree in person and in number (Farrell and Farrell, 2004).
ADJECTIVES
 Adjectives are used the same in English and Spanish
(Farrell and Farrell, 2004). But when using comparative
adjectives in Spanish, they are a single word which is
different than the suffixes -er, -est that are used in English.
Adjectives come before nouns in English and must agree
in gender and number. This is not the same, however, in
Spanish in most cases. There are some exceptions
to the rule, like for example, when
the words have different meanings
 depending on placement.
ADVERBS
An adverb in English is often formed by an adjective and a
suffix, like, –ly as used in the work quickly. In Spanish
adverbs are usually formed from adjectives and a suffix
like - mente as used in rapidamente (quickly). In English
there are also a few irregulars that show comparison like:
better, best. There are four irregulars that show
comparisons in Spanish, which are: bien, poco, mal, and
mucho. Negatives are also adverbs and English does not
allow use of double negatives but in Spanish the word
“no” comes before a verb. There can be more than one
negative in a sentence in Spanish (Farrell and Farrell,
2004).
PREPOSITIONS
Prepositions express place, time, and show the
relationship between two parts of a sentence that
never change form and have a noun or pronoun as
their object. English prepositions do not translate
directly to Spanish. Conversational English
sometimes uses prepositions at the end of a
sentence but in Spanish this is never done and the
words por and para are used instead
 (Farrell and Farrell, 2004).
CONJUNCTIONS & INTERJECTIONS
 Examples of English conjunctions include: and,
or, and but. In both English and Spanish there are
three types of conjunctions: coordinating,
subordinating, and adverbial. They work closely
the same way. In both English and Spanish,
interjections express a strong feeling or emotion
that can be a single word or a phrase. Interjections
are used to communicate emotion and follow the
same rules in both languages (Farrell and Farrell,
2004).
DATA ANALYSIS
                 BACKGROUND

Trace (pronounced Tracey) is a sixth grade English as a
Second Language (ESL) student . She was born in the
Dominican Republic in 1999. She and her family moved to
Hazleton, Pennsylvania in January of 2010 when she was
nine years old. She began school here in the fourth grade,
the appropriate grade level for her age upon her arrival.
Trace has a solid literacy background in her native Spanish.
She can read and write in Spanish proficiently in her grade
level and achieved good grades while in school in the
Dominican Republic. Trace was a complete non-English
speaker when she immigrated to the United States and
qualified to receive ESL instruction in the HASD. She is
currently a level 2.1.
DATA ANALYSIS
                       ERRORS

   One of the repeated errors Trace made in both written
    and verbal language was difficulty using correct verb tense.
    She confused come and came, study and studies, omitted
    –ed on scared, -es on teaches and –s on works.
   More common errors made by Trace were phonetic
    problems with the following phonemes: /sh/ and /ch/ and
    /d/ and /th/ and [i] and [I].
   Trace confuses the phonemes [I] instead of [i] in “teach”
    and “speak” and then does the reverse in “did”.
   Trace also confuses the phonemes /sh/ and /ch/
POSSIBLE REASONS
 These are most likely a developmental errors. In
English /d/ and /th/ are separate phonemes but in
Spanish both sounds are spelled with a /d/. Also,
Spanish words do not start with /th/. This is probably
why Trace often says and writes /d/ instead of /th/ in
“mother”, “with” and “that”. Trace will eventually
realize the differences in the two languages in written
form first, because she is such a good speller, and
then orally with more speaking practice. She may be
replacing the sound because as a new English
language learner she may be overcompensating usage.
In Spanish the vowel /i/ is pronounced like /e/ in
Maria or si which could explain Trace’s confusion
between the sounds.
SUGGESTIONS FOR EDUCATORS
My suggestions for ESL teachers would be to first, methodically
teach English. It might even mean starting with teaching simple
vocabulary, common phrases and basic parts of speech. The
teacher should then increase difficulty with a guided pace. In
addition to direct instruction, educator should immerse the
students in language. It is a good idea to label materials and objects
around the classroom. Role play or act out scenarios to give the
learning experience an authenticity and relevance. Teachers should
use technology and auditory materials whenever possible. Find a
balance for providing correction to remedy certain errors but still
provide positive feedback and encouragement. The ELL teacher
should set the learner up for success at every opportunity while still
challenging the student. Most important, ensure a comfortable
learning environment and provide whole
class activities that include ELL’s and
make them feel accepted into the group.
REFERENCES
 Farrell, E. R. & Farrell, C.F. (2004). Side by side: Spanish and English grammar. 2nd ed.
    NewYork, NY: McGraw-Hill.

   Freeman, D. and Freeman, Y. (2004). Essential linguistics: What you need to know to
    teach reading, ESL, spelling, phonics, and grammar. Portsmouth, NH: Heinneman.

   O’Grady, W., Archibald, J., Aronoff, M., & Rees-Miller, J. (2005). Contemporary
    linguistics: An introduction. (5th ed.). Boston, MA: Bedford St. Martin's.

   Pinker, S. (2007). The language instinct: How the mind creates language . New York, NY:
    Harper Collins.

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Language comparison presentation

  • 1. English & Spanish: A Language Comparison Presented By: Carinne Karlick
  • 2. BACKGROUND The proximity of Latin America to the United States and the growing influx of Latinos to this country have given a progressively more important place to the Spanish language here in the United States (Farrell and Farrell, 2004). A result of this influx is the increasing population of ESL students speaking Spanish as a first language (L1).
  • 3. A COMPARISON OF ENGLISH AND SPANISH ENGLISH SPANISH Modern English is a language that The Spanish language is one of the has developed over time and has Romance languages developed from evolved over 3 historical time Latin (Pinker, 1994). There is some periods: Old English, Middle disparity in the vocabulary and English and Modern English pronunciation of Spanish spoken in (Freeman &Freeman, 2004). Spain, but the Spanish spoken in The English language has Latin America and other parts of the borrowed some of its words from world is derivative of Castillian, which Spanish, like banana, and orange is a dialect of the Spanish province of (Pinker, 1994). Castile (Farrell and Farrell, 2004)
  • 4. THE ALPHABET No alphabet has a one to one correspondence between letters and sounds (Freeman and Freeman, 2004). The English alphabet consists of 26 letters and the Spanish alphabet contains 30 letters which includes the 26 letters of the English alphabet, as well as a few groupings of English letters that create additional sounds including: ch, ll, rr, and n with a tilde over it.
  • 5. SOUNDS English has a ch sound but it is the letter /c/ and /h/ that when combined together form a digraph. In Spanish the ch is its own letter. Other English digraphs are /sh/ and / th/. There is no /th/ digraph in Spanish. The Spanish letter /h/ is silent and the /j/ has a sound closer to the English letter /h/ (Freeman and Freeman, 2004). The Spanish letter /y/ can sound like a traditional /y/ sound in English like in the name Yolanda or the Spanish /y/ can sound like the English /j/ the Spanish name Jarielys. The /rr/ is rolled off the tongue for the /r/ sound. The Spanish /b/ and /v/ have the same sound and are pronounced like the English /b/.
  • 6. PUNCUATION There are similarities in punctuation between English and Spanish. For example, periods, commas, colons, semicolons are used in the same manner. There are differences also. In English, question marks and exclamation points are used at end of the sentence. In Spanish, these marks are written at the beginning, with the mark being upside-down as well as at the end with the mark right side up.
  • 7. NOUNS Nouns are used in the same way in both English and Spanish. In English, some nouns are considered to have gender to identify only if something is male or female, for example, man and woman or boy and girl. And English, gender typically makes no difference unless there are two forms of the word like, actor and actress, for example. In Spanish all nouns are either masculine or feminine. This is important to understand because the determiners in Spanish change according to the gender of the noun that it refers to (Farrell and Farrell, 2004).
  • 8. NOUNS….continued A determiner is a functional category that serves as a specifier of a noun (O’Grady, 2005). Some examples of specifiers in English are: a, the, these. Two singular determiners in Spanish is the feminine la or the masculine el. In Spanish there are plural determiners as well, which are las and los. Nouns also have singular and plural forms adding -s or –es in addition to the irregular nouns in both languages. The preposition /de/ forms possession in Spanish whereas English nouns have a possessive case formed by adding -’s or -s’.
  • 9. PRONOUNS Examples of English pronouns are: he, she, or we. Some Spanish pronouns are: el (he), ella (she), nosotros/as (we). Pronouns, like nouns, have gender, number and case and they change depending on the person like first, second, or third person (Farrell and Farrell, 2004). Personal pronouns can be used as subjects or objects. In Spanish there are three persons and there is another alternative of using the familiar you (tu) and polite (usted) forms (Farrell and Farrell, 2004). In English, subject pronouns go before the verb in the sentence. In Spanish, subject, direct object, and indirect object pronouns go before the verb.
  • 10. VERBS In English, most verbs have four tenses: infinitive, simple past, past participle, present participle (Farrell and Farrell, 2004). English does not normally conjugate verbs because there is only one inflected ending by adding /s/ to the third person singular of the present tense. In English some verb tenses need special endings: -ed, -en, or -ing. Some verbs require auxiliary verbs like: do, did, have, has, would, or could. There are irregular verbs in both English and Spanish. Spanish verbs are conjugated and endings are used to indicate the appropriate tense like: a, as, aste, e, or ando. In Spanish, various verbs use auxiliary verbs too like: cocer (to bake) or bailar (to dance). In Spanish, verbs need to agree in person and in number (Farrell and Farrell, 2004).
  • 11. ADJECTIVES Adjectives are used the same in English and Spanish (Farrell and Farrell, 2004). But when using comparative adjectives in Spanish, they are a single word which is different than the suffixes -er, -est that are used in English. Adjectives come before nouns in English and must agree in gender and number. This is not the same, however, in Spanish in most cases. There are some exceptions to the rule, like for example, when the words have different meanings depending on placement.
  • 12. ADVERBS An adverb in English is often formed by an adjective and a suffix, like, –ly as used in the work quickly. In Spanish adverbs are usually formed from adjectives and a suffix like - mente as used in rapidamente (quickly). In English there are also a few irregulars that show comparison like: better, best. There are four irregulars that show comparisons in Spanish, which are: bien, poco, mal, and mucho. Negatives are also adverbs and English does not allow use of double negatives but in Spanish the word “no” comes before a verb. There can be more than one negative in a sentence in Spanish (Farrell and Farrell, 2004).
  • 13. PREPOSITIONS Prepositions express place, time, and show the relationship between two parts of a sentence that never change form and have a noun or pronoun as their object. English prepositions do not translate directly to Spanish. Conversational English sometimes uses prepositions at the end of a sentence but in Spanish this is never done and the words por and para are used instead (Farrell and Farrell, 2004).
  • 14. CONJUNCTIONS & INTERJECTIONS Examples of English conjunctions include: and, or, and but. In both English and Spanish there are three types of conjunctions: coordinating, subordinating, and adverbial. They work closely the same way. In both English and Spanish, interjections express a strong feeling or emotion that can be a single word or a phrase. Interjections are used to communicate emotion and follow the same rules in both languages (Farrell and Farrell, 2004).
  • 15. DATA ANALYSIS BACKGROUND Trace (pronounced Tracey) is a sixth grade English as a Second Language (ESL) student . She was born in the Dominican Republic in 1999. She and her family moved to Hazleton, Pennsylvania in January of 2010 when she was nine years old. She began school here in the fourth grade, the appropriate grade level for her age upon her arrival. Trace has a solid literacy background in her native Spanish. She can read and write in Spanish proficiently in her grade level and achieved good grades while in school in the Dominican Republic. Trace was a complete non-English speaker when she immigrated to the United States and qualified to receive ESL instruction in the HASD. She is currently a level 2.1.
  • 16. DATA ANALYSIS ERRORS  One of the repeated errors Trace made in both written and verbal language was difficulty using correct verb tense. She confused come and came, study and studies, omitted –ed on scared, -es on teaches and –s on works.  More common errors made by Trace were phonetic problems with the following phonemes: /sh/ and /ch/ and /d/ and /th/ and [i] and [I].  Trace confuses the phonemes [I] instead of [i] in “teach” and “speak” and then does the reverse in “did”.  Trace also confuses the phonemes /sh/ and /ch/
  • 17. POSSIBLE REASONS These are most likely a developmental errors. In English /d/ and /th/ are separate phonemes but in Spanish both sounds are spelled with a /d/. Also, Spanish words do not start with /th/. This is probably why Trace often says and writes /d/ instead of /th/ in “mother”, “with” and “that”. Trace will eventually realize the differences in the two languages in written form first, because she is such a good speller, and then orally with more speaking practice. She may be replacing the sound because as a new English language learner she may be overcompensating usage. In Spanish the vowel /i/ is pronounced like /e/ in Maria or si which could explain Trace’s confusion between the sounds.
  • 18. SUGGESTIONS FOR EDUCATORS My suggestions for ESL teachers would be to first, methodically teach English. It might even mean starting with teaching simple vocabulary, common phrases and basic parts of speech. The teacher should then increase difficulty with a guided pace. In addition to direct instruction, educator should immerse the students in language. It is a good idea to label materials and objects around the classroom. Role play or act out scenarios to give the learning experience an authenticity and relevance. Teachers should use technology and auditory materials whenever possible. Find a balance for providing correction to remedy certain errors but still provide positive feedback and encouragement. The ELL teacher should set the learner up for success at every opportunity while still challenging the student. Most important, ensure a comfortable learning environment and provide whole class activities that include ELL’s and make them feel accepted into the group.
  • 19. REFERENCES  Farrell, E. R. & Farrell, C.F. (2004). Side by side: Spanish and English grammar. 2nd ed. NewYork, NY: McGraw-Hill.  Freeman, D. and Freeman, Y. (2004). Essential linguistics: What you need to know to teach reading, ESL, spelling, phonics, and grammar. Portsmouth, NH: Heinneman.  O’Grady, W., Archibald, J., Aronoff, M., & Rees-Miller, J. (2005). Contemporary linguistics: An introduction. (5th ed.). Boston, MA: Bedford St. Martin's.  Pinker, S. (2007). The language instinct: How the mind creates language . New York, NY: Harper Collins.