Murciélago, which means "bat" in Spanish.
I don’t know
Names should never be translated unless the owner of the name uses a translation or nick name. The counterpart of John in Spanish is Juan
Jewish Aramaic uses the Hebrew alphabet, which has 22 consonants and no vowels.
Yes, however the Yiddish alphabet is modified for vowels. The Hebrew alphabet has no vowels, and uses dots and dashes to represent vowels.Yiddish vowels not found in Hebrew:ah = אַaw = אָeh = עih or ee = יoy = ויoo = וHebrew vowels look like this (only the dots and dashes are vowels): אָ אַ אֲ אֵ אֶ אֱ אִ אִי אֹ אֻ אוּ אְ
Yes, Mexicans speak spanish and spanish uses commas.
This is my friend Pablo (Paul). It is improper to translate a person's name unless that person uses the translation himself.
sequoia
abstemious
The word which has all the vowels "AUTOMOBILE". There is A,E,I,O,U
Lamborghini
Names should never be translated unless the owner of the name uses a translation or nick name. The counterpart of John in Spanish is Juan
Mis animales favoritos son los gatitos Not a lot of Spanish speakers uses the word gatitos (kittens) when talking about their favourite animal, so I'd recommend using the word for cat. Mi animal favorito es el gato
There is no A in Hebrew. Hebrew uses a completely different kind of alphabet, which has no vowels in it.
Education ---- Check the related links for a good list.
1. A noun is a name of a person animal place or thing.
There is no common animal name that uses those letters. One of the V's was supposed to be a B, to spell "beaver."
Pronounced exactly the same = Aliana. It is improper to translate a person's name unless that person uses a translated name him/herself.
I believe this to be a facetious question i have a belly button (: