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Background and Research

26

T34

The Spanish Language of the United States

First of all, dear reader, let us focus on the title of this essay:

“The Spanish Language

of

the United States” instead of

“The Spanish Language

in

the United States.” The difference

between these two prepositions is an essential one: it implies

that we have begun to speak of a United States Spanish with

its own characteristics, as one more of the multiple variants of

the Spanish language spoken around the world.

Spanish Speakers in the United States

It is estimated that there are some 45 million Spanish-speaking

people in the United States, which translates into 15 percent

of the nation’s population, and it is expected that this figure

will rise to more than 150 million Spanish speakers by 2050.

In other words, it is highly probable that the United States

will become the country with the largest number of Spanish-

speaking inhabitants on our planet. More than half of the

45 million Spanish speakers were born in this country, and

they make up a younger-than-average portion of the overall

population: 48 percent of Hispanics are younger than 25

years of age. Whether or not a minority language replaces the

language spoken by the majority depends, above all, on the new

generations; thus, the relative youth of the Hispanic population

will undoubtedly influence the future of the Spanish language

in the United States.

Spanish Variants

When we speak of the Spanish language of the United States,

it is important to point out that we are not referring to a

monolithic, uniform language, but to one that encompasses

a number of variants. In this regard, we can divide the country

into several linguistic areas, each with its own distinct

characteristics. In the West and Southwest, where 60 percent

of Hispanics reside, a

chicano

variant of Spanish is spoken;

in Florida, and especially in Miami, a Cuban variant of Spanish

is heard. In the Northeast, including New York, New Jersey,

and Connecticut, a Caribbean form of Spanish is spoken.

Furthermore, one can hear

isleño

Spanish in Louisiana and a

distinctive form of Spanish spoken in the region of the Sabine

River (Louisiana and Texas).

English Influences

The massive influence of English has imparted a unique

imprint on the Spanish language of the United States, which

contrasts with that of other Spanish-speaking countries.

Gerardo Piña-Rosales

The North American Academy of the Spanish Language

This particular influence is manifested in new vocabulary, much

of it based on “borrowed” words, which have contributed to

the incorporation of

anglicisms

into the Spanish spoken in

those countries.

English Influence at Work

Hispanic immigrants try to learn and speak English at their

workplace and in their associations with Americans. This effort

to communicate tends to facilitate the use of

Spanglish

.

In time, if they have a certain level of education, they learn both

languages well and become bilingual. There is a desire

to acquire a better knowledge not only of English but also

of the Spanish of their heritage.

Spanglish

A distinctive characteristic of the Spanish language of the

United States is the so-called “code-switching,” which consists

of a speaker’s use of both languages during a conversation.

Since this means of communication has not been methodically

studied until recently, a certain notion exists

both among the

general public and among certain educators

that it is a random

mixture of languages, i.e.,

Spanglish

. In fact it is a process

with its own structural conventions, one that also plays a

unique role among bilingual Spanish speakers, precisely as

an alternative to communicating in a single language.

The economic importance of the Spanish language of the

United States is greater than that of any other Spanish-

speaking country. The Spanish language would survive if only

for the United States.

Bibliography

Amastae, J., and L. Elías-Olivares.

Spanish in the United

States: Sociolinguistic Aspects.

Cambridge: Cambridge

University Press, 1982.

Elías-Olivares, L., ed.

Spanish in the U.S. Setting: Beyond the

Southwest

. Rosslyn, VA: National Clearinghouse for Bilingual

Education, 1983.

Lipski, John M.

Varieties of Spanish in the United States

.

Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press, 2008.

López-Morales, Humberto, ed.

Enciclopedia del español en

los Estados Unidos.

Madrid: Instituto Cervantes/Santillana,

2008.