• @aliteral
    link
    26 months ago

    Don’t worry. At least you tried. Met some English speaking folks who expect everyone to talk in their language… In a country of Spanish speakers. To be fsir, here in Argentina we hsve mandatpry English classes in High School. Its a subject on its own right. So we have some people who can speak English pretty well.

    • sp3ctr4l
      link
      fedilink
      16 months ago

      One of my Spanish teachers in high school was Argentinian, so I learned that the ll is pronounced a bit differently as compared to many other Central/South American forms of Spanish, not a more pure y as a consonant sound, but sort of… zhy…?

      Not sure how to represent it textually, but I’ve found that these and other regional differences can be a fun point to banter about when getting to know native Spanish speakers.

      I would love to be able to visit, or maybe even live in Patagonia someday. Similar climate to where I grew up, absolutely beautiful country.

      (Obviously I would need to brush up on my Spanish a bit first… It has always astounded me that many or most Americans just expect to be understood in English no matter where they go…)

      • @aliteral
        link
        16 months ago

        In Argentina we use it mostly as a “y”. And sounds like an “sh”.

    • @MutilationWave
      link
      1
      edit-2
      6 months ago

      The German classes haven’t been en vogue for almost 80 years right? Fucking joking de acuerdo mon ami.