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ABECEDARIO

El alfabeto español
El Alfabeto español
(According to the Association of Academies of Spanish –
as of 2010)
a [ah] i [ee] p [peh]
b [beh] j [hotah] q [kuh]
c [ceh] k [kah] r [ereh]
d [deh] l [eleh] s [eseh]
t [teh]
e [eh] m [emeh]
u [oo]
f [efeh] n [eneh] v [uveh]
g [heh] ñ [ehnyeh] w [uveh doble]
h [acheh] o [oh] x [ehkis]
y [yeh] y griega
z [zetah]
El Alfabeto Español
(According to the Association of Academies of Spanish –
April, 1994)
a [ah] i [ee] p [peh]
b [beh] j [hotah] q [kuh]
c [ceh] k [kah] r [ereh]
d [deh] l [eleh] s [eseh]
t [teh]
e [eh] m [emeh]
u [oo]
f [efeh] n [eneh] v [uveh/veh]
g [heh] ñ [ehnyeh] w [uveh doble/doble veh]
h [ahcheh] o [oh] x [ehkis]
y [ee griegah]
z [zetah]
El Alfabeto Español
(nota bene)

 Letters of the Spanish alphabet are all


feminine: la a, una ce, etc.

 Ch, Rr and Ll were counted as separate letters


of the Spanish Alphabet until the Association
of Spanish Academies decided to introduce
normal alphabetical order in April 1994.
El Alfabeto Español
(nota bene)

 As a result, alphabetical order in dictionaries and


directories printed before April 1994 will differ from
the present order, e.g. chato came after cubrir, llama
after luz.
 In 2010, a number of changes still occurred to the
Spanish alphabet under the leadership of the Royal
Spanish Academy. Prior to 2010, the Spanish alphabet
had 30 official letters but 27 in alphabetical order. The
Real Academia Española had included ch, rr and ll, as
officially recognized letters but now officially
removed.

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