GrammarNavigator

Temas

Beginner

Phonology

The sound systems of Spanish, English and Chinese: consonants, vowels, syllable structure, and phonotactics.

Comparar idiomas

Phonology studies the sound systems of languages. Spanish has 5 vowels with consistent pronunciation. English has ~20 vowels with complex spelling. Chinese has lexical tones where pitch distinguishes meaning.

Ejemplos

Vowel inventory

5 pure vowels: a, e, i, o, u (simple, consistent)

Consonant inventory

~19 consonants; no /v/ vs /b/ distinction for many speakers

Syllable structure

(C)V(C): simple, open syllables preferred

Stress

Predictable by spelling; lexical stress marked with accent

Tone / pitch

No lexical tone; intonation only

Rhotics (r-sounds)

Tapped /ɾ/ or trilled /r/; always pronounced

Nasal consonants

/m/, /n/, /ɲ/ (ñ)

Affricates

/tʃ/ (ch); marginal /dʒ/

Ejemplos

Vowel inventory

~12 pure + 8 diphthongs (complex, spelling-irregular)

Consonant inventory

~24 consonants; complex clusters: strengths /strɛŋkθs/

Syllable structure

CCCVCCCC: complex clusters (strengths, texts)

Stress

Unpredictable; lexical stress changes meaning: object /ˈɒbdʒɪkt/ vs /əbˈdʒɛkt/

Tone / pitch

No lexical tone; intonation only

Rhotics (r-sounds)

Approximant /ɹ/; postvocalic r in rhotic accents

Nasal consonants

/m/, /n/, /ŋ/ (ng)

Affricates

/tʃ/, /dʒ/ (ch, j)

Ejemplos

Vowel inventory

~10 vowel qualities (simple) + 4 tones + neutral

Consonant inventory

~25 consonants; no final consonants except -n, -ng, -r

Syllable structure

(C)V(N): maximally CGVN; no complex clusters

Stress

No stress (tones instead); but sentence stress exists

Tone / pitch

4 lexical tones + neutral; tone distinguishes meaning: mā/má/mǎ/mà

Rhotics (r-sounds)

Retroflex consonants /ʈʂ/; rhotacized vowels: ér er

Nasal consonants

/m/, /n/, /ŋ/ (ng); syllable-final only /n/ and /ŋ/

Affricates

/ts/, /tʰs/, /tʂ/, /tʰʂ/, /tɕ/, /tʰɕ/ (z/c, zh/ch, j/q)

Comparación rápida

Conceptos gramaticales Español Inglés Chino
Vowel inventory 5 pure vowels: a, e, i, o, u (simple, consistent)~12 pure + 8 diphthongs (complex, spelling-irregular)~10 vowel qualities (simple) + 4 tones + neutral
Consonant inventory ~19 consonants; no /v/ vs /b/ distinction for many speakers~24 consonants; complex clusters: strengths /strɛŋkθs/~25 consonants; no final consonants except -n, -ng, -r
Syllable structure (C)V(C): simple, open syllables preferredCCCVCCCC: complex clusters (strengths, texts)(C)V(N): maximally CGVN; no complex clusters
Stress Predictable by spelling; lexical stress marked with accentUnpredictable; lexical stress changes meaning: object /ˈɒbdʒɪkt/ vs /əbˈdʒɛkt/No stress (tones instead); but sentence stress exists
Tone / pitch No lexical tone; intonation onlyNo lexical tone; intonation only4 lexical tones + neutral; tone distinguishes meaning: mā/má/mǎ/mà
Rhotics (r-sounds) Tapped /ɾ/ or trilled /r/; always pronouncedApproximant /ɹ/; postvocalic r in rhotic accentsRetroflex consonants /ʈʂ/; rhotacized vowels: ér er
Nasal consonants /m/, /n/, /ɲ/ (ñ)/m/, /n/, /ŋ/ (ng)/m/, /n/, /ŋ/ (ng); syllable-final only /n/ and /ŋ/
Affricates /tʃ/ (ch); marginal /dʒ//tʃ/, /dʒ/ (ch, j)/ts/, /tʰs/, /tʂ/, /tʰʂ/, /tɕ/, /tʰɕ/ (z/c, zh/ch, j/q)

Comparación lado a lado

Conceptos gramaticales Español Inglés Chino
Vowel inventory 5 pure vowels: a, e, i, o, u (simple, consistent)~12 pure + 8 diphthongs (complex, spelling-irregular)~10 vowel qualities (simple) + 4 tones + neutral
Consonant inventory ~19 consonants; no /v/ vs /b/ distinction for many speakers~24 consonants; complex clusters: strengths /strɛŋkθs/~25 consonants; no final consonants except -n, -ng, -r
Syllable structure (C)V(C): simple, open syllables preferredCCCVCCCC: complex clusters (strengths, texts)(C)V(N): maximally CGVN; no complex clusters
Stress Predictable by spelling; lexical stress marked with accentUnpredictable; lexical stress changes meaning: object /ˈɒbdʒɪkt/ vs /əbˈdʒɛkt/No stress (tones instead); but sentence stress exists
Tone / pitch No lexical tone; intonation onlyNo lexical tone; intonation only4 lexical tones + neutral; tone distinguishes meaning: mā/má/mǎ/mà
Rhotics (r-sounds) Tapped /ɾ/ or trilled /r/; always pronouncedApproximant /ɹ/; postvocalic r in rhotic accentsRetroflex consonants /ʈʂ/; rhotacized vowels: ér er
Nasal consonants /m/, /n/, /ɲ/ (ñ)/m/, /n/, /ŋ/ (ng)/m/, /n/, /ŋ/ (ng); syllable-final only /n/ and /ŋ/
Affricates /tʃ/ (ch); marginal /dʒ//tʃ/, /dʒ/ (ch, j)/ts/, /tʰs/, /tʂ/, /tʰʂ/, /tɕ/, /tʰɕ/ (z/c, zh/ch, j/q)

Ejemplos en contexto

Vowel inventory

Español

5 pure vowels: a, e, i, o, u (simple, consistent)

Inglés

~12 pure + 8 diphthongs (complex, spelling-irregular)

Chino

~10 vowel qualities (simple) + 4 tones + neutral

Consonant inventory

Español

~19 consonants; no /v/ vs /b/ distinction for many speakers

Inglés

~24 consonants; complex clusters: strengths /strɛŋkθs/

Chino

~25 consonants; no final consonants except -n, -ng, -r

Syllable structure

Español

(C)V(C): simple, open syllables preferred

Inglés

CCCVCCCC: complex clusters (strengths, texts)

Chino

(C)V(N): maximally CGVN; no complex clusters

Stress

Español

Predictable by spelling; lexical stress marked with accent

Inglés

Unpredictable; lexical stress changes meaning: object /ˈɒbdʒɪkt/ vs /əbˈdʒɛkt/

Chino

No stress (tones instead); but sentence stress exists

Tone / pitch

Español

No lexical tone; intonation only

Inglés

No lexical tone; intonation only

Chino

4 lexical tones + neutral; tone distinguishes meaning: mā/má/mǎ/mà

Rhotics (r-sounds)

Español

Tapped /ɾ/ or trilled /r/; always pronounced

Inglés

Approximant /ɹ/; postvocalic r in rhotic accents

Chino

Retroflex consonants /ʈʂ/; rhotacized vowels: ér er

Nasal consonants

Español

/m/, /n/, /ɲ/ (ñ)

Inglés

/m/, /n/, /ŋ/ (ng)

Chino

/m/, /n/, /ŋ/ (ng); syllable-final only /n/ and /ŋ/

Affricates

Español

/tʃ/ (ch); marginal /dʒ/

Inglés

/tʃ/, /dʒ/ (ch, j)

Chino

/ts/, /tʰs/, /tʂ/, /tʰʂ/, /tɕ/, /tʰɕ/ (z/c, zh/ch, j/q)

Puntos clave

Spanish: Simple vowel system (5 pure vowels). Consonants are mostly regular. Stress is predictable from spelling. No complex consonant clusters.

English: Complex vowel system (~20 vowels). Many consonant clusters. Stress is unpredictable and lexical. No tones.

Chinese: Simple vowel system but with lexical tones (4 tones + neutral). No complex consonant clusters. Final consonants limited to -n, -ng, -r.

Key concepts compared: Vowel inventory, Consonant inventory, Syllable structure.

Última actualización: 4 de junio de 2026