About 40% of the words in English have a Spanish cognate. This means that the English word has a similar Spanish word, such as "accident" (English) and "accidente" (Spanish).
A cognate is a word that sounds like the word with it's same meaning in a different language. An example of an English/Spanish cognate would be: Universe Universo English Spanish
"Erotico" is the Spanish word for "erotic," meaning sexy or hot. It is considered a cognate, meaning that both the English and Spanish words derived from the same word ancestor, usually a Latin word.
alcohol admiral algebra
En vain is a French equivalent of the English phrase "to no avail."Specifically, the preposition en means "in." The masculine noun vain is a cognate in French and English. The pronunciation is "aw veh."
Its spanish or is it spanish
The cognate for English "old" in Spanish is "viejo" and in French is "vieux".
Yes. In Spanish, "guitar" translates to "guitarra."
In Spanish and English there are common cognates.
A cognate is a word that sounds like the word with it's same meaning in a different language. An example of an English/Spanish cognate would be: Universe Universo English Spanish
A cognate in spanish is cognado. If you mean it the other way it is a word easy to translate into English from Spanish like balon is balloon. See?
I don´t think it is really a "cognate". The closest I can think of would be "superb".
The English word "brave" is a cognate of the Spanish word "valiente" because they share a similar origin.
A cognate.
The English word "mother" and the Spanish word "madre" are cognates because they share a common Latin root.
Yes, "fiesta" is a cognate. It comes from the Spanish language and is directly related to the English word "feast", both of which refer to a large and festive gathering or party.
imbécil (cognate of imbecile), or burro (jackass)
Erotico is a cognate for the English word erotic, but is more commonly related to sexy or hot.