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wnylib

(24,389 posts)
28. ¿A la orden de quien? Que chistoso.
Wed Jun 8, 2022, 11:44 AM
Jun 2022

Last edited Wed Jun 8, 2022, 12:29 PM - Edit history (2)

There is a group of native Spanish speaking friends in my area.

This group of friends grew out of contacts that a Mexican American friend has made since she first came to the US. I was her English tutor through Literacy Volunteers. Her husband is American and they met while he was on vacation in Mexico. His American accent is so thick that it hurts my ears. He uses the flat American "a" instead of the Spanish "a."

She also took night classes in English through the local school district. She was homesick and made friends with everyone in the class who came from a Latin American country and a few from other countries, like Albania. I got included as the gringa friend.

We started meeting for birthdays. That expanded to holidays and various family events. The size of the group varies as some move away due to careers or college while other new ones join. When we all get together in a restaurant, we reserve two banquet tables or a room.
They come from Mexico, Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic, Venezuela, Peru, Ecuador, Costa Rica, Colombia, and Brazil. The largest number is from Mexico. One is from Spain, but married to a Puerto Rican, so he has adopted more Latin American usages.

All of them (including me) say that Puerto Rican Spanish is the hardest to understand. The Mexicans are from Oaxaca, Guadalajara, Tijuana, and Chiapas (Mayan descent, met her American husband when he was in the Peace Corps). So there are a variety of Mexican dialects in the group. Portuguese is similar enough that we can usually understand the Brazilian, and she knows some Spanish and English for clarification if necessary.

I adopted Latin American grammar usage early on. I understand Castilian from Spain, but I am too used to Latin American pronouns and second person verb endings to speak "Spaniard." Venezuelan pronunciation is very close to Castillian, but with L.A. pronouns. So is Mexican, except for the Nahuatl influence.

I don't have any direct experience with Catalan or with Cuban Spanish. There is one Cuban woman in the group, but she refuses to use Spanish and I've only heard her speak English - perfectly, without an accent. Her family came here when she was a child.

We've had some hilarious experiences with occasional misunderstandings due to dialect, or, in my case once, missing the ending of a word and taking it for a different one. I love the Mexican sense of humor, very dry and at times, a kind of gallows humor.


How interesting. 3catwoman3 Jun 2022 #1
One thing that fascinates me is wnylib Jun 2022 #2
It's believed that the mix with Neanderthals helped H. sapiens adapt to colder climates. n/t sarge43 Jun 2022 #8
Well, that explains my long time love for winter backpacking. LastDemocratInSC Jun 2022 #11
No politics-no cell phones - no Trump-no TV packman Jun 2022 #6
It's unfortunate that a phrase in that article colors our perception of what those people were like 70sEraVet Jun 2022 #9
Agree that "earlier" is a better term. wnylib Jun 2022 #15
Evidence of Neanderthal Replacement Theory. multigraincracker Jun 2022 #3
hehe, you mean the native morans . AllaN01Bear Jun 2022 #4
Take a close look at MTG. multigraincracker Jun 2022 #7
or tfg . i get your meaning.:):):):) AllaN01Bear Jun 2022 #10
So glad to see your post. That's the way I saw it from the very first photo. Totally unnerving. Judi Lynn Jun 2022 #17
Low forehead, big brow multigraincracker Jun 2022 #18
Nah. I'm told I have a very high percentage of Neanderthal and I'm good with it. Scrivener7 Jun 2022 #21
wow. AllaN01Bear Jun 2022 #5
Thank you for sharing this fascinating information. niyad Jun 2022 #12
No, Andean populations lacked the genes. What they had was coca Warpy Jun 2022 #13
Yes, coca is a great medicine for wnylib Jun 2022 #19
No, I mentioned short stature and increased production of RBCs Warpy Jun 2022 #22
When I was up high in the Andes, I absorbed one thing quickly DFW Jun 2022 #14
Did you try coca tea? wnylib Jun 2022 #20
Must have forgotten DFW Jun 2022 #23
I have not been to Peru, but I have wnylib Jun 2022 #24
If I ever get to Peru, I will, thanks for the advice! DFW Jun 2022 #25
Local expressions - yeah, some of them are quite unique wnylib Jun 2022 #26
My friends always had an expression instead of "de nada" DFW Jun 2022 #27
¿A la orden de quien? Que chistoso. wnylib Jun 2022 #28
I don't come in contact with many Latin Americans over here DFW Jun 2022 #29
I sometimes surprise people in local stores wnylib Jun 2022 #30
She must have been hanging around with too many Cubans or Nicaraguans DFW Jun 2022 #31
No Nicarauguans. Only one Cuban who always wnylib Jun 2022 #32
I expected a picture of Don, Jr. relayerbob Jun 2022 #16
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