architecture
There is no such thing as "Creole" architecture. There are many Creole languages in the world, and one must first identify what is meant by "Creole" (e.g. Jamaican Creole, Gullah, Haitian Creole, etc.) before an architectural type can be attributed to it.
Example sentence - The architecture of the buildings in Greece were interesting.
In Spanish, sewing is 'coser'. In French, the word used is 'couture'. In German, the word sewing is 'Nahen'. In Italian, they say 'cucire'.
There is probably not a word that uses them all. You can spell disbud, dudish, maybe some others.
German-Gitarrist Spanish-Guitarrista Bulgarian-китарист Chinese-吉他手 French-Guitariste Greek-κιθαρίστας
In different cultures and languages the spelling of a word will change. Different languages have different spellings for word than what you are used to when spelling a word in English. The word nut in Thai is spelled Krayasat.
The word is spelled "architectural" (pertaining to buildings and architecture).
education
wife
"Taxi" is a fairly common cognate--the same word is used in a lot of languages.
The word here is likely BILINGUAL, speaking two languages.
There is no such thing as "Creole" architecture. There are many Creole languages in the world, and one must first identify what is meant by "Creole" (e.g. Jamaican Creole, Gullah, Haitian Creole, etc.) before an architectural type can be attributed to it.
There is no such language as "Creole". The word "Creole" refers to a category of languages that are a combination of 2 completely different languages. There are more than 100 different creole languages spoken in the world today. The most common creoles are English-based, French-based, and Spanish based creoles.
invisible
Life in different languages: Spanish: Vida French: Vie German: Leben Italian: Vita Japanese: 生活 (Seikatsu) Mandarin: 生活 (Shēnghuó)
I spell it like this: beautiful.
Actually, in some languages, you could spell it Barak. But the English version is "Barack." It is an Arabic word that means "blessed."