usage.written-vs-spoken
Written vs spoken Spanish: the register gap
Writing keeps the -se subjunctive, cuyo, passives with ser, and connectors like no obstante; speech runs on que-relatives, the se passive, diminutives, and discourse markers.
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Explanation
Formal writing favors: ser passives (fue aprobado), pluscuamperfecto, asimismo / no obstante / sin embargo, dicho/cuyo relatives, usted. Speech favors: active voice and se, double negatives stacked, fronting with echo pronouns, dale/listo/igual.
Practical line for relocators: WhatsApp ≈ speech with abbreviations; email and trámites ≈ formal writing. Mixing up (emoji in a visa letter, 'no obstante' at the market) is the give-away — match the channel.
Treat it as channel-matching: WhatsApp ≈ speech with abbreviations (active voice, se passives, dale/listo, diminutives), while email and trámites ≈ formal writing (ser passives, no obstante / asimismo, cuyo relatives, usted throughout). The give-away is a mismatch — an emoji in a visa letter, or no obstante shouted at the market.
Examples
Notwithstanding the above, payment will proceed.
Region: global
OK, we'll look at it later anyway, right?
Region: global
In chat: 'OK, done.' In the email: 'I look forward to your reply.'
Region: global