"el" is "the" in spanish
---- el (singular)(masculine), la (feminine), los (plural) (masculine), las (feminine)
el libro: the book
la mesa: the table
los libros: the books
las mesas: the tables
These are just Spanish and only a few examples of how they are used.
I'm not sure if that was what you were asking for, but, el, la, los, and las mean "the", but note the differences.
The word ruber means red in Latin. The word roseus means rose-red. The word ravus means gray, and the word albus means white.
Vacuum is a word that means an empty space.
Impartiality is the word which means objectivity.
"Anterior" is a word that means "in front."
The word that means lonely is "solitary."
Yes.The word antonym just means any word that means the opposite of another word, and synonym means any word that means the same thing as that word. Almost every word is an antonym or synonym of something.
an antonym and a word that means the same or similar to another word is a synonym
The Czech word "toje" means "this is" or "it is" in English.
The word in the poem that means to swarm is "teem."
The word that means legally collectible is 'enforceable.'
A word that means is not here is absent or missing.
the word unusual means something that is not ordinary.