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Pronunciation In North America, most speakers of American English use a. In New Zealand, most speakers of New Zealand English use ɑː. In some dialects spoken in the Caribbean and southeastern United States, an a is used as well. Outside North America and the Caribbean, a variety of vowels are found: close-mid front unrounded ɛ (the first vowel in "met"); open-mid back unrounded o, as in "boat"; semi-close back rounded u͍ (transcribed with a single character or two characters); close back rounded or near-close front unrounded û; and far-open front unrounded ö. Loanwords The pronunciation of words borrowed from French, Spanish, Italian or Quechua follows the pronunciation of the original language more closely than English loanwords are generally pronounced. A few words have more than one acceptable pronunciation. For example, "junta" may be pronounced with either /ʒ/ or /d͡ʒ/. In practice, most speakers use the "d͡ʒ" pronunciation for all purposes except on radio. The word "escudilla", which means "bowl", is pronounced either with two syllables (/es-kyu-dil'a/) or with only one syllable (/es-kə-dil'a/). In some dialects, the contrast between /ɹ/ and /r/ is neutralized in coda position, as in "nueva york" ([nweχaˈjork]) and "protegerse" ("to protect themselves", the reflexive form of the verb "proteger"). The phoneme inventory below is based on a survey conducted by Argentinian phonetician Norberto Priucel. Note that a selection of about a dozen indigenous languages is given for comparison.The most common syllable-initial consonants are /s/, /ʃ/, and /ʒ/. The most common syllable-final consonants are /n/, /l/, and /ŋ/. The following table gives the principal vowel sounds in Argentinian Spanish. The vowels are given in their pure form followed by their phonetic realization. The debate whether central vowels can be considered phonemes is active, but generally, no variety of Spanish lacks them altogether, even if they are pronounced in hiatus or by a very small portion of speakers. Vowel length is not normally contrastive except when it results from the merger of two formerly distinct vowels, as in "quién" ("who") versus "quien" ("who"). According to Priucel (p. 11), the quality of vowels depends on two factors. In some dialects, the contrast between /ɹ/ and /r/ is neutralized in coda position, as in "nueva york" ([nweχaˈjork]) and "protegerse" ("to protect themselves", the reflexive form of the verb "proteger"). The phoneme inventory below is based on a survey conducted by Argentinian phonetician Norberto Priucel. Note that a selection of about a dozen indigenous languages is given for comparison.The following table gives some example words, first in free form and then as they would be pronounced in Spanish. cfa1e77820
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