The word for "check" depends on the context.
A piece of paper to be deposited in a bank is a "cheque".
To check one's work is "verificar" (to verify.)
The check in a restaurant is "la cuenta".
'Check(mate)' in Chess is "jaque"
To check (= to repress) is 'reprimir, detener'
To say, "Check, please!" in Spanish you say, "¡La cuenta, por favor!"
Cheque means "check", as in a bank draft.
The correct Spanish word is "ciudad," which means "city" in English. "Cluadad" is not a valid Spanish word.
correct = correcto, correctamente
The word leche is Spanish for "milk".
The correct past participle for the Spanish word "salir" is "salido."
The correct Spanish word unscrambled from DIHULME is "mΓ©duli".
the correct answer is BALONCESTO
The correct past participle of the word "check" is "checked."
That doesn't seem to be a valid Spanish word - at least, it doesn't appear in the online dictionary of the Real Academia Española. Please check the spelling. If the spelling does turn out to be correct, it is either a person's name or an imported word from another language being spelled in Spanish.
The correct answer is recuerdos, which means souvenirs in Spanish.
Correcto mundo means "really correct" or literally "correct true". Spanish has gender forms: correcto and correcta as in gramática correcta?'Correcto mundo' is not a real Spanish word, it is a slang term, and actually the word 'mundo' in Spanish means 'world,' so it is not proper Spanish to say 'correcto mundo' anyway. Use 'correcto' or 'correcta.'
That's not Spanish, I think you mean sub-editors. They're newspaper/magazine employees who check and correct the 'proof' (articles, columns) submitted by reporters, journalists, etc.
That doesn't seem to be a Spanish word. Check the spelling. "Soltera" is the female form of unmarried.