- In
Spanish grammar,
voseo (Spanish pronunciation: [boˈseo]) is the use of vos as a second-person
singular pronoun,
along with its ****ociated
verbal forms...
-
voseo. In a few dialects, all
three pronouns are used, with usted, tú, and vos
denoting respectively formality, familiarity, and intimacy. In
voseo,...
-
language from
Southern Italy. It is the most
prominent dialect to
employ voseo (the use of vos in
place of the
pronoun tú,
along with
special accompanying...
- vivís—'you live'); and
verbal voseo with the
Chilean verb
endings (tú hablái, tú comís, etc.). "Full"
voseo coexists with
verbal voseo (tú comés) in Uruguay....
-
conjugated in
accordance to
voseo; tú tenés
instead of tú
tienes (tuteo) or vos tenés (
voseo). Use of the
tuteo or
voseo form of the
prepositional pronoun—ti...
-
Chileans use the
voseo and
tuteo forms for the
intimate second-person singular.
Voseo is
common in Chile, with both
pronominal and
verbal voseo being widely...
-
Nicaragua adopted voseo as a
symbol of nationalism.
Educated Costa Ricans are also more
comfortable using vos, and
negative attitudes towards voseo have been...
- most
other dialects.
Characteristic regional usages of
pronouns include voseo (using vos, the
familiar singular "you",
rather than the tú of
other dialects)...
- historical, and
cultural proximity, as well as the
sharing of
features such as
voseo,
which is "the use of vos as a second-person
singular pronoun." Paraguayan...
- language.
Uruguayan Spanish, as a
variant of Rioplatense,
employs both
voseo and yeísmo (with [ʃ] or [ʒ]) and has a
great influence of the
Italian language...