Mexican: Is there Really Such a Language?

December 23rd, 2007 · No Comments

When speaking about the Spanish language, is there really such a thing as ? Is the Spanish spoken in Spain, drastically different from the Spanish spoken in

Mexico?

The differences that exist between the spoken in Spain and the one spoken in

Mexico are no greater than we could find if we compare American and British English. There are without doubt differences in vocabulary as well as colloquialisms that are particular to each country, but deviations similarly exist in regional areas within Mexico, or in

Spain
, or for that matter in any Latin American country. Mexico Square of Cultures

As far as

Mexico is concerned there are variety or indigenous languages that remain spoken, but Spanish remains the official language. The rise of Spanish is historically tied to Spanish conquests in the

New World.

As a result of Mexico City’s central role in the colonial oversight of New Spain, the population of the city naturally included large numbers of speakers from

Spain.

Mexico City
had also been the capital of the Aztec Empire, and many speakers of the Aztec language Nahuatl continued to be spoken there and in the surrounding region. Zocalo%20 %20Mexico%20City Mexican: Is there Really Such a Language? Zocalo%20 %20Mexico%20City Mexican: Is there Really Such a Language?

Interestingly,

Mexico City exercised a standardizing effect on the Spanish language over the entire country, more or less, becoming a distinctive dialect of Spanish which incorporated a significant number of Hispanicized words. <!–[if !supportLineBreakNewLine]–>
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The Spanish spoken in the area of the Yucatán Peninsula is different from all the other forms of the language, both as far as the intonation and the incorporation of words from the Mayan language is concerned, while the Spanish spoken in the areas bordering Guatemala resembles the variation of Central America Spanish spoken in that country.

Interestingly those areas were originally part of the Audiencia of Guatemalan and only became part of Mexico after the wars of colonial independence; most of the southern state of Chiapas and Soconusco region did not become part of

Mexico until the 1870s.The migrations that took place in the 19th and the 20th century from Mexico to the United States have caused Mexican Spanish to become the most widely spoken variety of Spanish in the

United States of America
, except in the East Coast.

The Spanish spoken in the Gulf Coastal areas of Veracruz and Tabasco is also quite distinctive, at least at the level of vernacular speech, as the Spanish spoken there exhibits more Caribbean phonetic traits than that spoken in the remainder of

Mexico.

With a population of more than a 108 million Spanish speakers and growing,

Mexico is numerically, the foremost Spanish speaking country in the world.


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