if it's the device: "parlante"
if it's a person: "hablador"
It's the same just Myers. To get a Spanish-speaker to say it with English pronunciatikon, it might help to write it: 'maias'
Leigh Anne isnt a spanish name so there for it is the same as it would be said in english. If you wanted to spell it so a Spanish-speaker would pronounce the name like an English-speaker, it would be: 'Li An'
To get a Spanish-speaker to give the name the English pronunciation, you'd be best to spell it 'Odet', or they might say 'AwDEttay'
Being a name, the same. But to enable a Spanish-speaker to 'hear' it written down so it sounds like the English: Dilan
A Spanish speaker unaware of its Englsh pronunciation may well 'read' Reese as 'RAYessay'. Spelling it 'Ris' may get from said speaker an approximation to the English pronunciation.
G - ge (khay) A - a (ah) I - i (ee) L - ele (Ellay) The above shows the letters, then their Spanish names, then (in brackets) the latter, roughly phonetically for an English-speaker
how do you spell lemon in spanish
"con" I think "con" is how you spell with in spanish.
flaco is how you spell skinny is spanish.
parece that is how you spell seems in spanish
Heck with Spanish - can you spell it in English?
"Thursday" in Spanish is "jueves". It is not capitalized.