Rioplatense Spanish

Rioplatense Spanish (espaol rioplatense) is a dialect of the Spanish language which is mainly spoken in the areas in and around the Ro de la Plata basin, in Argentina and Uruguay.

Location

Rioplatense is mainly centered around the cities of Buenos Aires, Rosario and Montevideo, the three most populated cities in the area, along with their respective suburbs and the areas in between. The dialect is also found in other areas, not geographically close but culturally influenced by those population centers. Rioplatense is the standard in the audiovisual media, due to its prevalence in the capital, where the most important media conglomerates are based. However, it is not as common in other large areas of Argentina, such as the province of Mendoza, which is heavily influenced by Chilean dialects, or in the province of Crdoba, which has a dialect with a heavily marked intonation, even while next to the provinces of Buenos Aires and Santa Fe. Meanwhile, cities further away like Bariloche (also near Chile) and Ushuaia (in the southernmost part of the country) speak Rioplatense Spanish, probably due to the influence of nation-wide television broadcasting from Buenos Aires. The south of Argentina was colonised more recently from Buenos Aires or directly from Europe, whereas the provinces to the north have long-established Spanish-speaking communities with their own accents and dialects.

Influences on the language

The adoption of the Spanish language in the area was caused by the Spanish colonization in the region. Part of the Viceroyalty of Peru, the Rio de la Plata basin had its status lifted to Viceroyalty of the Ro de la Plata in 1776. Until immigration to Argentina, the language of the region had virtually no influence of other languages and varied mainly by the means of localisms.

Middle Eastern and Asian Immigration

Although relatively recent immigrants, people from Asia and the Middle East could influence the region in the future, if not already doing so.

Native American languages' influence

Native American languages have been largely influenced or even wiped out by Spanish language in the area, but some Native American words have also entered into the Spanish of the region, and even reached English.
  • cndor (from Quechua, "condor")
  • mate (an infusion, from Quechua's mati, "pumpkin")
  • pampa (Quechua, "plains, flat terrain")
  • gur (Guaran for "kid")
  • che (Guaran for "I" or "my", originally used as che amigo "my friend").

European immigration

Several languages influenced the criollo Spanish of the time, because of the diversity of immigrants to Argentina:
  • 1870-1890: mainly Spanish, Basque, Galician and Italian speakers and some from Germany, Yugoslavia and other European countries
  • 1910-1945: Again from Spain, Italy and in smaller numbers from across Europe; Jewish immigration, mainly from Russia and Poland from the 1910s until after World War II was also large.
  • English speakers, from the British Isles, were not great in numbers but were an influential set in industry, business, education and agriculture, figuring importantly in high society. This influenced a respect for English customs and language.

Latin American immigration

Argentina has also seen immigration from neighbouring countries, notably Bolivia, Peru and Uruguay and in smaller numbers from Brazil, Chile and Paraguay. They have provided slang words like bondi (meaning bus in Argentina, from Brazilian Portuguese "bondi", meaning trolley), as well as other Native American- and criollo-derived words.

Linguistic features

Phonology

Rioplatense Spanish differs from so-called standard Spanish in the pronunciation of certain consonants.
  • As with many other dialects, the sounds represented by ll (the palatal lateral /L/) and y (/j/) have fused into one, pronounced /j\/ (voiced palatal approximant, close to English s in measure, or to French j as in jour). This phenomenon is called yesmo.
  • The fricatives /s/ and sometimes /f/ and /x/ have a tendency to become an indistinct aspiration /h/ when ending a syllable, or to disappear altogether.

Pronouns and verb conjugation

One of the features of the Argentine and Uruguayan speaking style is the voseo: the usage of the pronoun vos for the second person singular, instead of t. Voseo is found also in other places around the Spanish-speaking community. Vos is used with forms of the verb that resemble those of the second person plural in traditional (Spain's) Spanish. The second person plural pronoun, which is vosotros in Spain, is replaced with ustedes. While usted is the formal second person singular pronoun, its plural ustedes has a neutral connotation and can be used to address friends and acquaintances as well as in more formal occasions. Ustedes takes a grammatically third person plural verb.
   
Inflection of verb amar
Spanish Rioplatense
yo amo yo amo
tu amas vos ams or tu ams 1
el ama el ama
nosotros amamos nosotros amamos
vosotros amis ustedes aman
ellos aman ellos aman
1 The tu ams form is only used in Uruguay. Although apparently just a stress variation (from amas to amas ), the origin of such a stress is the loss of the diphtong of the vosotros inflection from "vosotros amis" to "vos ams".

Usage of tenses

Although literary works use the full spectrum of verb inflections, in Rioplatense (as well as many other Spanish dialects), the future tense has been replaced by a verbal phrase (periphrasis) in the spoken language. This verb phrase is formed by the verb ir ("go") followed by the preposition a and the main verb in the infinitive. This is akin to the English phrase going to + infinitive verb. For example:
  • Creo que descansar un pocoCreo que voy a descansar un poco
  • Maana visitar a mi madreMaana va a visitar a mi madre
The Rioplatense speaker rarely uses the perfect past tense (choosing simple past over it), so past tense phrases rarely are of the form Alguna vez he ido a comer a ese restaurant. The form Alguna vez fui a comer a ese restaurant would be chosen, or even without periphrasis: Alguna vez com en ese restaurant.

Intonation

Due to the large Italian inmigration to Argentina in the late 18th and first half of the 19th centuries, the local pronunciation and gestures are heavily influenced by Italian. Residents of Spain tend to note such Italian intonation more easily than people from nearby regions.

See also

 

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