Posts from August 2009

Here are some currencies in Spanish-speaking countries. Check them out!

Balboa – Panamá
Bolívar – Venezuela
Colón costarricense – Costa Rica
Colón salvadoreño – El Salvador
Guaraní – Uruguay
Lempira – Honduras
Oro Córdoba – Nicaragua
Euro – España
Peso argentino – Argentina
Peso boliviano – Bolivia
Peso chileno – Chile
Peso colombiano – Colombia
Peso cubano – Cuba
Peso mexicano – México
Peso uruguayo – Uruguay
Quetzal – Guatemala
Sol nuevo – Perú
Dólar estadounidense – Ecuador

Nos vemos prontito!

OK, let’s see how much you know about the Spanish language itself. Take this little quiz and find out.

1 – Spanish and Castillian are:
a) the same language;
b) two very different languages;
c) two very similar languages.

2 – Spanish is spoken as a first language in:
a) only in Spain and America;
b) only in Spain, America and Africa;
c) in Spain, America, Asia and Africa.

3 – Spanish in Latin America is:
a) spoken the same way lexically as in Spain;
b) phonetically the same in all Latin American countries;
c) presents differential aspects in one region or the other and with the one spoken in Spain.

4 – The official language(s) in Spain are:
a) Spanish and three other languages: Basque, Galician and Catalan;
b) only Spanish all over Spain;
c) Spanish and other indigenous languages coming from America.

5 – In Paraguay, the languages officially spoken are:
a) Spanish and Quechua;
b) Spanish and Guarani;
c) Spanish and Tupi.

6 – Spanish has received contributions from other languages for its formation, among them:
a) Arabic;
b) English;
c) both a and b are correct.

I will provide the answers soon.

¡Cuídense mucho!

Pablo Neruda was born on July 12th 1904 in Parral, Chile and died on September 23rd 1973 in Santiago de Chile. His real name was Neftalí Reyes Basoalto and, besides being a poet, he was a translator and a diplomat. He won the Nobel Prize of Literature in 1971 and his writing has strongly influenced Latin American writing and acquired universal value. He wrote one of Chile’s most varied and rich literary works.

He wrote a self portrait titled Autorretrato and it is a very rich source of Spanish language learning. Read it out here.

You can also listen to and read Neruda’s acceptance speech for the Nobel Prize here

Here are some of his quotes:

“I love you without knowing how, or when, or from where. I love you straightforwardly, without complexities or pride; so I love you because I know no other way.”

“Love is so short, forgetting is so long.”

“A child who does not play is not a child, but the man who doesn’t play has lost forever the child who lived in him and whom he will miss terribly.”

“And one by one the nights between our separated cities are joined to the night that unites us.”

“You can cut all the flowers but you cannot keep spring from coming.”

See you next time!

Back to the Top