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.
Yes. In Spanish, "guitar" translates to "guitarra."
"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".
The word "precipice" has a cognate in Latin, which is "praeceps," meaning "headlong" or "steep."