<p>Ifyou've ever had to learn Spanish for class (especially in the US) you'reprobablyutterlyconfusedastowhytherewouldbeanythingusefulinSpanishthatalanguagelikeEnglishcouldadopt.Especiallybecauseyouarenowgoingoverthememoriesofallthosewretchedverbconjugations,genderednouns,adjectiveconjugations,etc.ButI'm not going to be going over those, and instead I'mgoingtobefocusingontwoelementsofSpanishthatareamazingandyouprobablydidn'tlearntoomuchabouttheminyourclasses.</p>
<p>First,let's go over the inverse punctuation marks: "¡" and "¿". Have you ever had to read a text out loud in English class, you get to the end of the sentence, and you realize it was supposed to be an exclamation? Or sometimes you'vereadasentencethatisveryambiguousastowhetherit's a statement or a question, so you start pronouncing it as a statement until you reach the end and have to re-read the sentence. This is what inverse punctuation marks are for! Something I love about Spanish is you already know these things about a sentence from the very beginning of it. What makes it even more strange is that, to my knowledge, Spanish is the only language that uses these. Even our neighbors, the Portuguese, don'tusethem.</p>
<p>Also,asasidenote,beforeanyonecomplainsthatImyselfamnotusinginversepunctuationhere,I'd like to note that I'mwritinginEnglish.AlthoughIbelieveit'd be an awesome addition to the English language, this would make the "do everything as it'ssupposedtobedone" side of me cringe.</p>
<p>Secondly,Iwanttotalkabouttildes.InSpanish,ifIremembercorrectly,therearesevenrulesabouttildes/dieresesthatifyouknowthem,youcanpronouncepracticallyanywordintheSpanishlanguage.Isn't it a pain in English when you read a new word, you use it in a conversation, and a friend points out that you'repronouncingthiswrong?Thisactuallyhappenedtomewiththeword"adolescence"(Iusedtoemphasizethefirst'o').InSpanishwehavethreecategoriesforwordsdependingonthetonicsyllable(whichsyllableisemphasized):agudas,wherethetonicsyllableisontheultimatesyllable;llanas,wherethetonicsyllableisonthepenultimatesyllable;andesdrújulaswherethetonicsyllableisonanysyllablebeforethepenultimatesyllable.Therulesgo,thatesdrújulasalwayscarryatilde,llanascarryatildewhenthewordendsinanyconsonantexcept'n'or's',andagudascarryatildewhenthewordendsinanyvowel,'n',or's'.Therearethenthreerulesafterwardspertainingtomonosyllablewords,diphthongs,triphthongs.Finally,youhavethediereseswhicharealwaysusedontheletter'u'('ü').ThisexistsbecauseinSpanishthegroupofletters"gui",forexample,ispronouncedthesameas"gee"in"geese".Soinordertogetthe'u'tomakeitssoundinthatcombinationoflettersfortheword"pengüino",it's necessary to add the diereses (basically, it makes otherwise silent letters vocalized). Knowing this, you can pronounce every word in the Spanish language, and write every word you hear (so long as it'snotanAndalusiantalking,thenyou'llbemissingabunchofconsonants).</p>