Or however many seasons there are in Spanish.
Also how many letters of alphabets is in the Spanish dictionary?|||Spring - Primavera, Summer - Verano, Fall - Oto帽o, Winter - Invierno
The traditional alphabet is: A B C CH D E F G H I J K L LL M N 脩 O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z (29 letters).|||Justin-Bobby gave you the seasons correctly. I could repeat the same but I wanna note something important.
I want to point out that there are 27 letters in the spanish alphabet. The same 26 that english uses plus the form "ch" to make 27.
The "帽" (the n with a tilda) is not regonized by the academy in Spain as a separate letter and hasn't been for years and years. No dictionary in the world will list this as a separate letter in the alphabet (unless for demonstration or exception) but never as a separate letter in the "official" alphabet.
The same is true for "rr" and "LL." These are diphthongs and not in the alphabet. Both the "脩" and "RR" and "LL" will appear in charts of pronunciation but are not part of the alphabet.
But then, take a look at this -
http://spanish.about.com/cs/forbeginners鈥?/a>
It includes all of what I just told you is not in the alphabet. I guess it depends on who you talk to. I've talked to dozens of children all across Latin America having fun with the alphabet and other things (like counting to 100 using the ending "th" like the first, second, the 9th, the 50th etc) and never, ever have I heard a child use "RR" or "LL" or even an "脩" when they recite the alphabet. It just isn't taught and is Not included in the alphabet of Latinos.
Hey, did you catch the little statement at the end of the page that I gave you with my link? It says - "It may interest you to know that not all authorities (or at least not all textbooks) agree on which letters make up the alphabet." That's my point! This is not consectated in concete - not yet.
You will still find a few dictionaries that provide a separate section for words beginning with "ch" but even that is fading quickly away and I think that it even will soon be gone. Many dictionaries no longer make such a distinction.
Take the Berlitz dictionary - the world's most accepted. It has done away with using "ch" as a letter. Then there's the VOX series "acclaimed the Finest Dictionaries in the Spanish-Speaking World." They too have done away with a seperate section for "ch." Their "C" section jumps from "ceuti" to "cia (hipbone)" with no regard to "ch."
So that leaves us, at most, 27 if we include "ch." Without that, the spanish alphabet is the same as ours.
I hope that puts an end to this debate but I guess it will rage on - too bad.
Rich|||Winter - Invierno
Spring - Primavera
Summer - Verano
Autumn - Oto帽o
Son 30 letras (30 traditional letters)|||Spring = la primavera
Summer = el verano
Autumn/Fall = el oto帽o
Winter = el invierno
ur welcome :)|||Primavera,Verano,Oto帽o,Invierno.
"26"|||verano, primavera, otono (n with a tilda), and invierno
28 letters
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