Why You Can’t Understand Dominican Spanish Speakers
Item
issuer
                                Spanish con Salsa See all items with this value            
                Language
                                English See all items with this value            
                Date Accepted
                                11/29/19 See all items with this value            
                list of contributors
                                Kesia Sousa See all items with this value            
                Title
                                Why You Can’t Understand Dominican Spanish Speakers See all items with this value            
                content
                                Host: So there’s three main regions in the Dominican Republic. I think what we’ll do first is let’s talk a little bit about some of the characteristics of the accent of Dominican Spanish. What a lot of people tell me is that, ‘Wow, when I hear someone speaking Spanish and they’re from the Dominican Republic, they talk so fast, and I have no idea what they’re saying.’
Host: Okay, so it just sounds like that one -
Kesia: But it doesn’t matter if it’s masculine or femenine, yes we drop the letter ‘d’.
Host: And I guess that would be confusing if I’m hearing that and I’ve never heard it before, especially with some connected speech not just hearing the word in isolation. It could be a little difficult to pick up on that. I think that one of the reasons why people perceive that Dominicans speak faster because, honestly, I think Spaniards also speak pretty fast. I went to Panama and they also speak pretty fast. I think a lot of people speak fast, almost like it’s a competition like, “We speak the fastest Spanish!” Right? I think that when you add that with dropping off these letters and the words get shorter, a lot of it is the shortening of the words that people don’t know is happening so they perceive it as being faster than it may really be because these words are just...there are syllables missing, right? There are entire letters missing. See all items with this value
                Host: Okay, so it just sounds like that one -
Kesia: But it doesn’t matter if it’s masculine or femenine, yes we drop the letter ‘d’.
Host: And I guess that would be confusing if I’m hearing that and I’ve never heard it before, especially with some connected speech not just hearing the word in isolation. It could be a little difficult to pick up on that. I think that one of the reasons why people perceive that Dominicans speak faster because, honestly, I think Spaniards also speak pretty fast. I went to Panama and they also speak pretty fast. I think a lot of people speak fast, almost like it’s a competition like, “We speak the fastest Spanish!” Right? I think that when you add that with dropping off these letters and the words get shorter, a lot of it is the shortening of the words that people don’t know is happening so they perceive it as being faster than it may really be because these words are just...there are syllables missing, right? There are entire letters missing. See all items with this value