Which pronunciation should you teach?

Is there one correct pronunciation in Spanish? And what does that mean for teaching?

Careful pronunciation exists in all Spanish-speaking countries; it just sounds different. Many teachers and learners silently assume that the pronunciation of central and northern Spain is the actual target pronunciation. It is not. This question becomes most audible in one feature: is there a distinction between s and z/c (distinción) or not (seseo)?

Listening comparison

How does the difference sound? The following recordings present the same word pair and word sequence once with distinción and once with seseo. For teaching, the key point is to make both realizations, distinción and seseo, audible as equally legitimate variation.

With and without distinction: casa vs. caza

This comparison shows that z/c and s, depending on where speakers come from, are pronounced either differently or the same.

Word sequence casa – caza

Distinción

Central/northern Spain

casa and caza are pronounced differently.

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Seseo

Spanish America / Canary Islands / parts of Andalusia

casa and caza are pronounced the same way.

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Different, but just as correct

This word series makes the pronunciation with an interdental sound and as s especially easy to hear.

Word sequence gracias – ciudad – paz – ración

Distinción

Central/northern Spain

Particularly audible in c in gracias and ciudad as well as z in paz.

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Seseo

Spanish America / Canary Islands / parts of Andalusia

c, z, and ci are pronounced like s here.

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Seseo and distinción

The contrast heard in the recordings is not limited to individual words; it reflects regional pronunciation norms. The maps below show where seseo and where distinción is the usual pronunciation.

Seseo in Spanish America: listening examples

Short excerpts from radio broadcasts show that seseo is the normal pronunciation in many varieties.

Seseo in authentic audio excerpts

These examples feature radio speakers from Spanish America. They show how normal it is to realize z and c before e/i as s.

Mexico

… esta mujer que se hizo famosa en 2017 gracias a un video que se hizo viral.

MEXb80def27c

In gracias and hizo, z/c before e/i is pronounced like s.

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Chile

Se ve espectacular y está más cerca.

CHL8b78ac16b

In cerca, c is pronounced like s.

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Argentina

cerca de Miami.

ARGCBAeca46a987

Here too, c in cerca is pronounced like s.

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Costa Rica

Gana una cena para cuatro personas.

CRI61d9dc2dc

In cena, c is pronounced like s.

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Audio from CO.RA.PAN

Classroom prompts

The contrast between seseo and distinción leads to practical classroom decisions:

  • Make variation audible
    The map and speaker numbers can trigger an aha moment: the pronunciation many textbooks present as standard is only the norm in a small part of the Spanish-speaking world.
  • Listen before naming the concept
    Play the recordings first and let learners describe the contrast before introducing technical terms.
  • Explain norms transparently
    Learners should understand that distinción and seseo are not a hierarchy of right and wrong, but regionally valid pronunciation norms.
  • Choose your own target consciously
    Teachers should make their own pronunciation choice explicit and explain why they use it.

Further exploration

Additional pronunciation features are explored through accompanying audio examples.

ll and y

The traditional distinction between ll and y is now rare; in most varieties both are pronounced alike, a pattern known as yeísmo. In Argentina and Uruguay, the sound is often noticeably different and can sound sh-like. This is not inferior pronunciation either, but part of the accepted national norm.

Open audio examples for further exploration

/s/ weakening

In many regions, /s/ is weakened or deleted at the end of a syllable or word. This is not careless speech, but a regular part of the pronunciation norm in those areas. In teaching, the phenomenon matters most for listening comprehension.

Open audio examples for further exploration