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All letters in the Spanish alphabet have a lowercase form, as Spanish makes use of both uppercase and lowercase letters in its written language.
Spanish and English use the same alphabet, with the addition of ñ. The official Spanish alphabet has 27 letters.
The letters that are repeated in the Spanish alphabet are "L", "A", "E", and "S."
The letters imecitacrr unscramble to "crimen" in Spanish, which translates to "crime" in English.
The Rodil is a Spanish river with five letters.
The letters "k" and "w" are the only two letters of the Spanish alphabet that are primarily used in non-Spanish words, specifically in loanwords or foreign words that have been integrated into the language.
The Spanish word that can be formed from those letters is "balsa", which means raft in English.
Spanish uses English letters because both languages share the same Latin alphabet. The English alphabet, which is derived from the Latin alphabet, includes the same letters as Spanish, with a few additional letters like "k" and "w" that are not commonly used in Spanish. This shared alphabet makes it easier for Spanish speakers to learn and understand English, and vice versa.
The Spanish anagram "acebo" means "holly."
The letters "ch", "ll", and "rr" are three letters that are not technically part of the Spanish alphabet anymore, but they make there own sounds. The only letter different still in the Spanish alphabet is the letter "ñ".
Ch (che) and Ll (elle) are considered letters of the Spanish alphabet, however in 1994 the Royal Spanish Academy (RAE) decreed that these letters would no longer be treated as separate letters in dictionaries.
from spanish words or letters