Seeing as he spoke in Aramaic, probably.
The name "Jesús" has an accent on the u. "Jesucristo" does not have an accent.
In spanish it is "yogur", with no accent mark.
The word "hola" can in fact have an accent, depending on who is saying it. It's a Spanish word, so someone of actual Spanish descent may have an accent while saying the word.
No, the word "sabe" does not have an accent mark in Spanish. The accent mark is not needed because it follows the normal rules of stress in the Spanish language. "Sabe" is the third person singular form of the verb "saber," meaning "to know."
does it have an accent?inglés = English (the language and the adjective)ingles (no accent) = groin or crotch
Listen to people speaking English with a spanish accent, eg on films, tv, radio, music and always roll your R's and speeeek lyk dis For a Mexican Spanish accent, it seems the following pronunciation rules may apply: Y = J (yes = jes) J = Y for English words (Jump = Yump) J = H for Spanish words (San Jose = San Hosay) S = ES (Stop = Estop) For a Castilian Spanish accent, use a lisp (rumored to be modeled after King Ferdinand's lisp): C = TH (Gracias = Grathias)
jesus (spanish accent)
It's written with an accent over the 'u', and pronounced: khaySOOSS ('kh' as in 'loch')
bordo is Spanish for board, it does not have an accent.
In spanish it is "yogur", with no accent mark.
It is the same as in English but just with a Spanish accent and accent marks.
The Spanish word for "cheese" is "queso", no accent mark.
The Spanish word for YES is sí (with an accent).Without the accent, si is the Spanish word for "if."Si
In Spanish "noviembre" does not have any accent marks. Note that the months are not capitalized in Spanish.
No (spanish accent) puedo esperar Asta chilpayate this is Spanish accent :-)
Yes. The proper way to write it is inglés.
Yes, Cuban Spanish has a unique accent, just as each Spanish-speaking country has its own distinct accent.
No.