Of course. La Real Academia Española (The Spanish Real Academy) is the Spanish dictionary for all the Spanish speakers.
No, Spanish dictionaries may vary slightly in different Spanish-speaking countries due to regional differences in vocabulary, slang, and expressions. While the core language remains the same, there may be variations in definitions or preferred terms.
No, Italian people are not the same as Spanish people. For example, they speak Italian, and eat Italian food. Spanish people don't do that, they speak Spanish, and eat Mexican food.
Because spanish speaking people have children. It is the same reason why a lot of people speak French.
Do you speak English = Habla Usted inglés(it's the same in Dominican Spanish as in Standard Spanish).
In this case both sentence mean the same. There is no important difference as far as I see it.
People in Spain speak Spanish for the same reason that people in England speak English--that's where the language evolved, and there was never any reason (conquest, fashion, or otherwise) for the Spanish people to switch to using another language.
The same as in English. The official Spanish dictionary (that of the Real Academia Española in Madrid) gives chicano's roots as a shortening of the word mexicano.
no, i does not mean the same thing because both word and their definitons are listed in the English/spanish dictionary.
many Spanish people have learned to speak English, the same as English speaking people have learned to speak Spanish, this goes for almost any one who thinks it is great to learn different languages and it serves them well when travelling to different parts of the world.
the same readon south American speak spanish Spain
No, some words are different in Spain then the Americas.
Cuba and Mexico both speak dialects of Spanish.For more information about the languages of Mexico, click here.For more information about the languages of Cuba, click here.
it's the same way as any other language. How people speak English or Spanish or any other language..?