The were really no letters taken away. For dictionary purposes, "ch" and "rr" are not classifed as separate characters. In other words, modern dictionaries don´t have a "ch" section. However, the "ch" sound is unchanged, and in fact many current Spanish language classess still teach it as a separate letter.
"rr" is not a problem in this regard, since no Spanish words begin with "rr".
The answer is the word empty. Take away the e and you have the letters mpty. Take away the p and you have the letters mty. Take away the y and you have the letters mt.
sixty
'five' since if you take 3 letters away (f, i and e) you are left with v which is 5 in Roman numerals. OR VIII Whichever answer seems like it would work in the situation
England got land taken away from them and some privelages
Guam, Cuba, Puerto Rico and the Philippines.
All letters in the Spanish alphabet have a lowercase form, as Spanish makes use of both uppercase and lowercase letters in its written language.
Three-letter words taken from the letters in "careen":acearearccancarneerearecFour-letter words taken from the letters in "careen":careracenearSix-letter words taken from the letters in "careen":careen
Spanish and English use the same alphabet, with the addition of ñ. The official Spanish alphabet has 27 letters.
The answer is number 5 F, I, V, E= 4 letters But, still has 5 when the 3 letters-"F", "I", "E" are removed because "V" stands for "5" as in the Roman numbers.
The letters that are repeated in the Spanish alphabet are "L", "A", "E", and "S."
The Rodil is a Spanish river with five letters.
The letters imecitacrr unscramble to "crimen" in Spanish, which translates to "crime" in English.