"In the north" is a literal English equivalent of the Spanish phrase en el norte. The masculine singular phrase serves as a rare instance where English and Spanish phrase and sentence structure resemble one another. The pronunciation will be "EY-nel NOR-tey" in Uruguayan Spanish.
El código Enigma in Spanish is "the Enigma code" in English.
"El picaposte" translates to "the woodpecker" in English.
"El perro" translates to "the dog" in English.
(el) agua
El pescado / pez feliz
That phrase translated into English basically reads as "What is the weather like in Northern Mexico?"
"El código Morse"
The Spanish translate the English word "thief" as "el ladron." The English word "steal" is translated as "Robar."
The man is dead
"The blackboard" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase el pizarrón. The masculine singular phrase also translates as "the big slate board" and "the chalkboard" according to English contexts. The pronunciation will be "el PEA-sar-RON" in Uruguayan Spanish.
The word "periodico" is Spanish and when translated to English means newspaper and "nacional" is Spanish for National, "el" means "the" so therefore the phrase "periodico el nacional" in English means The National Newspaper.
where is North