- Peninsular Spanish
Peninsular Spanish, also known as European Spanish, refers to the varieties of Spanish spoken in the
Iberian Peninsula as opposed to the Spanish spoken inthe Americas , also known asLatin American Spanish .In general, the main characteristic that distinguishes both variants of Spanish is the use of a different
phoneme /θ/, that is, the initial sound of the English word "think" - (in Peninsular Spanish) for the soft 'c' (c+e, c+i) and the 'z'; also known as 'distinción'.However, this characteristic is far from uniform in all
dialectical variations of the Spanish of theIberian Peninsula . TheAndalusian dialect and the Spanish spoken in theCanary Islands do not use 'distincion ' as a general rule, but could use eitherseseo orceceo .Variants
*
Andalusian Spanish
*Canarian Spanish
*Castilian Spanish
*Castrapo (Spanish spoken in Galicia as opposed to Galician)
*Murcian Spanish ources of Additional Material
*http://www.mtsu.edu/~rmorris/morris2000.pdf = Constraint Interaction in Spanish /s/-Aspiration: Three Peninsular Varieties
*http://www.mtsu.edu/~rmorris/morris2002.pdf = CODA OBSTRUENTS AND LOCAL CONSTRAINT CONJUNCTION IN NORTH-CENTRAL PENINSULAR SPANISH
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