back-espalda
head-cabeza
eyes-ojos
leg-pierna
elbow-coda
heel-muy
hair-pro
chin-barbilla
stomach-estomago
lips-labios
forehead-frente
nose-nariz
mouth-boca
toe-dedo del pie
dedo-finger
tounge-lengua
ear-oreja
teeth-diebtes
foot-pie
hand-mano
No it might work but it will probably be in spanish in some parts and others in english.
In Spanish speaking parts of the US a cowboy or cattle driver
Blue is the English equivalent of 'azul'. The word in Spanish is pronounced 'ah-THOOL', in parts of Spain. In Latin America, and in such other parts of Spain as Andalucia, it's pronounced 'ah-SOOL'.blue
It means body in English. It comes from Latin and is found in Spanish and Italian.
If you are referring to the body part that spells the name of a dessert in English, the word is "pie" which in Spanish means "foot".
I speak both English and Spanish, and I'm only 12! You spell it like this:pay, but you pronounce it the same. Just instead of tightening your lips,don't tighten them so much. I would say the answer is: Torta
it means body parts No it doesn't dumbo. You're probably not even latin. (I am) It means The Body. DUMBO!! ( to whoever wrote that el cuerpo means body parts)
English, Spanish, and possibly Vietnamese (in the US) and French (in Canada)
it means it depends my family is spanish both parts so i really enjoy this
King Edward sent his body to the different parts of Scotland to tell the Scot's not to mess with the english.
English spanish and french
"Body and head" is a literal English equivalent of the Spanish phrase cuerpo y cabeza. The phrase also may be found expressed as el cuerpo y la cabeza (literally, "the body and the head") since Spanish employs definite articles where English does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "KWER-po ee ka-VEY-sa" in Uruguayan Spanish.