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Acentuation - StressGrammar questions– conjugations, verb tenses, adverbs, adjectives, word order, syntax, etc. |
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#2
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Thanks for sharing this. I also try to boil down information to a clear, concise statement to make it easier to understand and remember. For a really long time now, I have explained it in an almost identical fashion:
Quote:
If you talk to native speakers, there is a whole intricate explanation involving palabras agudas, graves, llanas, esdrújulas, y sobreesdrújulas, etc. It's quite interesting, but for me it's harder to grasp.
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#4
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Quote:
Plural: "caracteres", spoken stress on the first "e". Since the plural ends in "s" and the spoken stress is on the second to the last syllable, there's no accent mark.
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If you find something wrong with my Spanish, please correct it! |
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#5
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Although the stressed syllable is different in the plural, very few seem to know why. It's simply because this is an exception to the rule. There are only a handful of these.
English has all kinds of exceptions to the rules, so I wouldn't cry foul just yet. |
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| accent mark, aguda, esdrújula, grammar, grave, llana, sobreesdrújula, stress |
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