I was just wondering. Is there an audio recording of new Mexican Spanish you can post here. If you can't, is there a link I can go to to listen to it? I'm very interested in hearing it myself
I was born in las vegas new mexico, last name, Bustamante, I have read that it's a spanish last name, my great grandmother, the mother of my grandmas husband,was Ortiz, she looks kinda like a Native American or Mexican, she only spoke spanish and she was born in northern new mexico.
my kids were born in Albuquerque, their mother is from Mexico City and I am their father of non Spanish background (but French and Scots-Irish and etc.) and they have their own words like : muvete (move it), socketines (socks) gimmelo (gimme it) etc etc haha
I was born in Espanola, New Nexico. My last name is "Serrano", and my ancestor was Hernan Martin Serrano, who came to New Spain during the Onate period. He is the first European credited with exploring Texas and eastern New Mexico. My father, Moises Serrano, was raised in Canones, on Spanish Land Grant property deeded to Hernan Serrano. The spanish spoken there is the form of spanish spoken by the settlers who came to the area since the 16th century. It has endured, because of the remote areas.
Congratulations Professors Vigil and Garland on the publication of your language book. What a huge undertaking! This retired ESL teacher/journalist recently produced a Spanish board game called Verb It. As professional linguists, you appreciate how difficult it is to teach and to learn Spanish verb conjugations. Verb It motivates Spanish learners to practise those complex verbs in a relaxed, fun activity. Check out my Verb It video on Youtube and online. Hasta luego, carol franks
interesting. we also speak spanish in the Philippines. We say Palenque instead of Mercado. Because Mexico used to govern the Philippines for 200 yrs. do we adopt the Palenque term which originally came from the Aztec language...
The accent here is very distinctive as well a lot of other Spanish speakers say we tend to sing our words. It strange because here in New Mexico we have always been taught that we are "Spanish". Even though Spain and New Mexico are so far away we have similar ties. For example the flag of New Mexico is Red and Gold after Isabela of Spain. I belive those are also the colours of your flag.
His name is Garland Bills, not Bill Garland! He says so himself a the beginning of the video, and the surname on the spine of the book is "Bills", not "Garland"!!! Come on UNM (or should that be (MUN, or MUN, or UMN?), GET YOUR ACT TOGETHER!
si pueden hablarlo pero, estan hablando sobre un dialecto que se habla en colorado y nuevo mexico desde el tiempo de los conquistadores en una Universidad Estadounidense en donde el Ingles es un idioma "DeFacto" no es oficial. Seria interesante obtener una copia de este libro y ver las palabras que talvez hemos escuchado y asi saber de donde proviene y porque.
I'm from New Mexico. I'm glad you found this interesting. I am interested in the Spanish from Spain. If there's anything you want know about our Spanish feel free to ask.
It's very interesting, but i'm from the north and i don't say "truchar" ¬¬
fernandov1492 3 weeks ago
I was just wondering. Is there an audio recording of new Mexican Spanish you can post here. If you can't, is there a link I can go to to listen to it? I'm very interested in hearing it myself
Kierkegaard123456789 5 months ago
I was born in las vegas new mexico, last name, Bustamante, I have read that it's a spanish last name, my great grandmother, the mother of my grandmas husband,was Ortiz, she looks kinda like a Native American or Mexican, she only spoke spanish and she was born in northern new mexico.
ray505ray 6 months ago
my kids were born in Albuquerque, their mother is from Mexico City and I am their father of non Spanish background (but French and Scots-Irish and etc.) and they have their own words like : muvete (move it), socketines (socks) gimmelo (gimme it) etc etc haha
PerditaLupo 1 year ago
@PerditaLupo Haha, socketines.
afz902k 8 months ago
I was born in Espanola, New Nexico. My last name is "Serrano", and my ancestor was Hernan Martin Serrano, who came to New Spain during the Onate period. He is the first European credited with exploring Texas and eastern New Mexico. My father, Moises Serrano, was raised in Canones, on Spanish Land Grant property deeded to Hernan Serrano. The spanish spoken there is the form of spanish spoken by the settlers who came to the area since the 16th century. It has endured, because of the remote areas.
arklat 1 year ago
Congratulations Professors Vigil and Garland on the publication of your language book. What a huge undertaking! This retired ESL teacher/journalist recently produced a Spanish board game called Verb It. As professional linguists, you appreciate how difficult it is to teach and to learn Spanish verb conjugations. Verb It motivates Spanish learners to practise those complex verbs in a relaxed, fun activity. Check out my Verb It video on Youtube and online. Hasta luego, carol franks
karlieanne2002 1 year ago
interesting. we also speak spanish in the Philippines. We say Palenque instead of Mercado. Because Mexico used to govern the Philippines for 200 yrs. do we adopt the Palenque term which originally came from the Aztec language...
marcoespania 1 year ago
@marcoespania It's nahuatl, there is no aztec language, but it's okay
fernandov1492 3 weeks ago
The accent here is very distinctive as well a lot of other Spanish speakers say we tend to sing our words. It strange because here in New Mexico we have always been taught that we are "Spanish". Even though Spain and New Mexico are so far away we have similar ties. For example the flag of New Mexico is Red and Gold after Isabela of Spain. I belive those are also the colours of your flag.
kristopherg2008 1 year ago 2
I guess I was wondering how some of our words compare to words used there in Spain.
kristopherg2008 1 year ago
His name is Garland Bills, not Bill Garland! He says so himself a the beginning of the video, and the surname on the spine of the book is "Bills", not "Garland"!!! Come on UNM (or should that be (MUN, or MUN, or UMN?), GET YOUR ACT TOGETHER!
3mappa3 2 years ago
lmao that dude laughing at pinates is a fag lol we know what kinda pinates he was thinking about lol
makoshark26 2 years ago
Really intresting...
AQuickLittleFlight 2 years ago
Thank you for uploading. I look forward to finding this work at my university's library.
dkrustyklown 2 years ago
¿Cómo puedo adquirir una copia si vivo en México?
arteks2001 2 years ago
amazon(dot)com
unmlive 2 years ago
podrían hablar en español , dado que son profesores en esta lengua que es también una lengua extendida en el continente Americano.
telkines 2 years ago
Sí, pero su audiencia es para los que hablan inglés.
arteks2001 2 years ago
si pueden hablarlo pero, estan hablando sobre un dialecto que se habla en colorado y nuevo mexico desde el tiempo de los conquistadores en una Universidad Estadounidense en donde el Ingles es un idioma "DeFacto" no es oficial. Seria interesante obtener una copia de este libro y ver las palabras que talvez hemos escuchado y asi saber de donde proviene y porque.
johnjack19691988 2 years ago
I'm from the South of Spain and I found this very interesting.
jaschemasch 2 years ago 7
I'm from New Mexico. I'm glad you found this interesting. I am interested in the Spanish from Spain. If there's anything you want know about our Spanish feel free to ask.
kristopherg2008 2 years ago
This is wonderful! I hope to get my copy at the UNM bookstore when I come into town in just over a week. Thank you!
LimaHabilis 2 years ago