This dialect of Spanish is similar enough in nature to traditional Castilian Spanish in that, if two people who each speak one dialect, will be able to understand one another. This can be compared to people who speak British English to American English. While our variations of English are not the same, we can easily understand one another, aside from a few differences in slang. The other two major dialects in the Americas are Caribbean Spanish, spoken in Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Dominican Republic, and Rioplatenese Spanish, found in Argentina and Uruguay. Caribbean Spanish is noted for omitting final consonants, and Rioplatenese Spanish is noted for using intonation in a way that resembles Italian more than
This dialect of Spanish is similar enough in nature to traditional Castilian Spanish in that, if two people who each speak one dialect, will be able to understand one another. This can be compared to people who speak British English to American English. While our variations of English are not the same, we can easily understand one another, aside from a few differences in slang. The other two major dialects in the Americas are Caribbean Spanish, spoken in Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Dominican Republic, and Rioplatenese Spanish, found in Argentina and Uruguay. Caribbean Spanish is noted for omitting final consonants, and Rioplatenese Spanish is noted for using intonation in a way that resembles Italian more than