Kuz they kan
Kuz they kan
Katherine in Latin is "Catherina" sometimes it is spelled "Katharina". The Romans would have spelled it with the C as the letter K was rarely used in Latin.Katherine in Latin is "Catherina" sometimes it is spelled "Katharina". The Romans would have spelled it with the C as the letter K was rarely used in Latin.Katherine in Latin is "Catherina" sometimes it is spelled "Katharina". The Romans would have spelled it with the C as the letter K was rarely used in Latin.Katherine in Latin is "Catherina" sometimes it is spelled "Katharina". The Romans would have spelled it with the C as the letter K was rarely used in Latin.Katherine in Latin is "Catherina" sometimes it is spelled "Katharina". The Romans would have spelled it with the C as the letter K was rarely used in Latin.Katherine in Latin is "Catherina" sometimes it is spelled "Katharina". The Romans would have spelled it with the C as the letter K was rarely used in Latin.Katherine in Latin is "Catherina" sometimes it is spelled "Katharina". The Romans would have spelled it with the C as the letter K was rarely used in Latin.Katherine in Latin is "Catherina" sometimes it is spelled "Katharina". The Romans would have spelled it with the C as the letter K was rarely used in Latin.Katherine in Latin is "Catherina" sometimes it is spelled "Katharina". The Romans would have spelled it with the C as the letter K was rarely used in Latin.
you just spelled it correctly! it is with a "c."
Yes , with a "K" .
The pronunciation of most "CA" words is the "K" sound, but can, cancel, and canopy are all spelled with a C in English.
Catherine of Aragon is spelt with a 'c'
Karate is spelled with a "k" due to its origin in Japan, where the native language uses the "k" sound instead of the "c" sound used in English. The Japanese writing system also does not differentiate between the "k" and "c" sounds, so "karate" is a more accurate transliteration of the word from Japanese.
The word is spelled back, just as you spelled it.
Nicki is spelled Nicki
The word is spelled stuck, just as you spelled it.
The word "lack" meaning "to be without" is spelled as you have spelled it in the question.
Its a combination of calves and ankles, meaning there is no defined ankle, just one big kankle. I don't know why it's spelled with a k instead of a c....