In Spanish, H's are usually silent. For example, the word "hombre," is pronounced, "OHM-breh."
h does not make a sound in spanish for j makes the h sound.
Julián the J in spanish sound like the H in Honda
ks as in English. In some words, it is pronounced like the spanish J (an emphatic h sound). In medieval spanish, it was pronounced like SH.
The "j" in spanish is most like the English "h".
Yes, the "h" in "hermosa" is silent. In Spanish, the letter "h" is generally not pronounced, making the word sound like "er-mosa." This applies to other words starting with "h" in Spanish as well.
Ee- ha is the pronunciation. The H makes a long e sound, while the j makes a short h sound, like ha.
In English, the letter "j" typically makes the "j" sound as in "jam" or "jump." However, there are some words where the letter "j" can sound like the letter "h." For example, in Spanish loanwords like "jalapeño" or "Juan," the "j" is pronounced as an "h" sound. This is due to the phonetic rules of the Spanish language influencing the pronunciation of these borrowed words in English.
Hiena. Remember in Spanish you do not pronounce the H so it would sound like /iena/: i: like in i - gloo e: like in e - lephant n a: like in a - pple
It is pronounced as "ee-GWAHL-men-teh" in Spanish, where the "g" is soft like an "h" sound.
Yes, it is. Only in the digraph "ch", letter "h" changes the sound of "c", being like that in English "check".
Jeremías. The letter J in Spanish makes an H sound so it should like hair-a-mi-oz
rojo (with the j pronounced as an h sound)