Bolivian Spanish (or Castilian) is the variety of Spanish language spoken by the majority of the population in Bolivia, either as a mother tongue or as a second language. Within the Spanish of Bolivia there are different regional varieties. In the border areas, Bolivia shares dialectal features with the neighboring countries.
Throughout Bolivia the preservation of phonemic contrast between and the lateral (i.e. the absence of yeísmo) is the norm.Canfield 1981:28Lipski 1994:188 Debuccalization of syllable-final is frequent in the lowlands, while in the highlands the sibilant tends to be preserved, realized either as a laminal or, frequently, an Apical consonant .Canfield 1981:29 In highland dialects, the Trill consonant phoneme (orthographic or word-initial ) is often Assibilation, realized as a voiced apicoalveolar fricative,Lipski 1994:189 or alveolar approximant, which pronunciation is similar to the sound of () in English. In highland Bolivian Spanish there is "intense reduction" of unstressed vowels in contact with , often resulting in syllables with as their nucleus, e.g. pues ("well,...") pronounced .Canfield 1981:29–30
This dialect is characterized by the debuccalization ("aspiration") of final . For example, the word pues is pronounced . For the second-person-singular pronoun and verb forms, the use of "voseo" is dominant. The use of diminutive -ingo and the augmentative -ango is unique to this dialect. For example: chiquitingo ("very small") and grandango ("very large").
Loanwords from Chiquitano or from an extinct variety close to Chiquitano include bi 'genipa', masi 'squirrel', peni 'lizard', peta 'turtle, tortoise', jachi 'chicha leftover', jichi 'worm; jichi spirit', among many others.
The second-person-singular voseo is in full use in Tupiza, in the west of Tarija, and in the rest of the aforementioned areas.
The Chapaco accent has an intonation similar to that of Jujuy, Salta, and Tucumán in Argentina, as the territory where it was originally spoken is now located in the Río de la Plata Province of Tarija. This intonation appears throughout the Bolivian Chaco, Tupiza (Sud Chichas) and the Chuquisaca valleys of Camargo, Villa Abecia, Azurduy, Alcalá, etc.
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damasco |
abacate |
banana |
pimentão |
água sanitária |
sutiã |
manteiga |
carro |
cabide |
prendedor |
computador |
espiga de milho |
gasolina |
toranja |
vagem |
fogão |
calcinha |
ervilha |
pêssego |
amendoim |
pipoca |
saia |
tênis |
refrigerante |
soja |
canudo |
morango |
batata doce |
piscina |
camiseta |
lavadora |
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