with spanish, usually the way you hear the word, is the way you spell it.
With english, it's not that easy.
And spanish speaking people have accents, and are used to speaking and pronouncing the letters differently, and their alphabets are longer
The Spanish word for English is ingles. Ingles can mean the English language [of England] or an English person [from England[.
"Quien" in Spanish translates to "who" in English. It is an interrogative pronoun used to ask about a specific person or people.
"Where are you?" in the second person formal singular and "Where is he (it, she)?" in the third person singular are English equivalents of the Spanish phrase ¿Dónde está? The pronunciation will be "THEON-dey-STA" in Spanish.
yes, it is used about as frequently in spanish as it is used in English
As in the language "inglés". As a person, "inglés or inglesa".
"Es" in English translates to "is" or "it is." It is the third-person singular form of the verb "to be" in Spanish.
The word "cuñada" in Spanish translates to "sister-in-law" in English. It refers to the sister of a person's spouse.
In Spanish, "hemos" is the first-person plural form of the verb "haber," which means "we have" in English.
"He/It/She/You will be!" is an English equivalent of the Spanish word Será!Specifically, the word is a verb in the future indicative. It operates from the perspective of the second person formal singular ("you") or the third person singular ("he, it, she") as the listener. The pronunciation will be "sey-RA" in Spanish.
"Mi" is "my" in English. It is not part of a verb conjugation. The idea of "person" is not applicable.
You ask, "¿HABLA USTED INGLÉS?"
persona means person in English