In Spanish and English there are common cognates.
cognate
The English word "mother" and the Spanish word "madre" are cognates because they share a common Latin root.
These records concentrate on archeology with some overlap into cognate fields.
Alliteration is a literary device where the initial consonant sounds are repeated in close proximity in a phrase or sentence. It is not an onomatopoeia, cognate, palindrome, or eponym.
a cognate
Many Spanish words have cognates in English. This is very hard if you don't know to do them.
A linking verb that can be used with a cognate is called a Transitive or Intransitive verb. The cognate is the verbs object.
"January" translates to "enero"
Cognate languages have many of the same roots for words. Ex: impaciente
The cognate for English "old" in Spanish is "viejo" and in French is "vieux".
Yes. In Spanish, "guitar" translates to "guitarra."
The word "precipice" has a cognate in Latin, which is "praeceps," meaning "headlong" or "steep."