8 Royalty-Free Audio Tracks for "Spanish Words"

00:00
03:16
Spanish lesson 1.
Author: Alenakrauchanka
00:00
00:01
Sustica saying "adios!" in spanish.
Author: Matteusnova
00:00
09:51
Young people in a party talking and laughing with some intelligible words in latin spanish. Recorded with double sennheiser mk416 and roland r44.
Author: Carlandalvarg
00:00
00:12
Spanish words for beethoven's ode to joy, first phrase. Recorded in a flat tone for further processing with dsp software.
Author: Erufian
00:00
15:38
A long walk at night through the redlight city district in amsterdam, build in the 13th century. International mostly young, male audience. English, chinese, danish, spanish, dutch & other voices. Various swells from intimate to more crowded settings. Happy, aroused, drunk, stoned. Narrow alleys and wider streets. Might hear some words not suitable for children.
Author: Bubbled
00:00
02:45
Location: charlotte douglas international airporttime: april 2015. A strong storm hit charlotte, north carolina, and flights got delayed or canceled. The gates got crowded and people were restless. Lots of airline announcements, people talking on their cell phones, airport electric cart beeps, voices in english and a few words here and there in spanish, etc. Don't remember if this was recorded using the zoom h1 or h5 with the xyh-5 x/y microphone capsule.
Author: Dignicraft
00:00
03:03
Female making an announcement in spanish (mexican dialect) aboutthe magnet school in which my daughter attends.
Author: Mahanmahan
00:00
00:18
Ringmodulated inversion of my speech from the file https://freesound. Org/people/kb7clx/sounds/648443/ invertedspeechcq. Wav. I took the raw recording and used goldwave's mechanize effect to translate my voice to a center frequency of 14khz. I then demodulated it first at 10. 6 and then 10. 2khz meaning that what comes out is essentially the opposite sideband, offset by 3. 4 and 3. 8khz respectively. 3khz just didn't sound as good. The first i filtered with a low pass of 2. 9khz, the second was filtered to below 3. 4khz to emulate a communications receiver passband. I am speaking upside down as described in this video. Https://www. Youtube. Com/watch?v=q_ykxzcbh-g beginning at 00:03:16. Being blind i can't see their diagram, but i've got my own by ear intuitive method, keeping in mind that oo and ee are farthest from each other, all other vowells get closer the closer they are to the middle of the human voice frequency range. I say: huhlay sue quee, sue quee, sue quee do ux. Cahlloong sue quee sue quee sue quee do ux. The ay in huhllay is like when a spanish speaker says béisbol (baseball). The a in cahlloong is like the a in cat if you're opening wide for the doctor. The oo is like the oo in book. Listen to the other file and you'll hear: hello cq cq cq dx. Calling cq cq cq dx.
Author: Kbclx
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