The Cathedral
Plaza
"Plaza" in Spanish typically refers to a public square or marketplace, often found in the center of a city or town where people gather or conduct business.
I hear plaza, but I think there is another name that I can't remember...
A piazza ? (Italian) A plaza ? (Spanish)
The idealized Spanish town in Mesoamerica had a central business plaza with a Catholic church nearby. It also had good farmland close to the borders of the village.The idealized Spanish town in Mesoamerica had central plaza, street pattern layout in gridiron form, and located on good agricultural land.
New Town Plaza was created in 1985.
A plaza is like a town square.
Place is a French equivalent of the Spanish word plaza. The pronunciation of the feminine singular noun -- which may be preceded by the feminine singular definite (la, "the") or indefinite (une, "a, an") articles and which translates as "(public, town) square" -- will be "plahss" in French and "PLA-sa" or "PLA-tha" in Spanish.
New town plaza doesn't make any sense. If your talking about the Plaza, then the only shop is the Pet Shop. The only shop in the Town is the Gift Shop.
Station Plaza is in the town where mayor hopkins live or has the Town Hall . Where your house is .
It is in station plaza, which is just to the left of town plaza.
Plaza is Spanish for a public square in a city or town. The word originally came from the Latin of the people in Spain. That popular word was plattia. And it traced back to the original, more literary Latin word of plateia for courtyard.