Words in Spanish are spelled the way they sound. In English, the word record can mean the act of recording or the result, depending on where you put the stress. In Spanish, the spelling changes if the stress changes. Tú means you and tu means your. Te means to you and té means tea. Those are probably the closest you will find to the way English has words that change based on how you pronounce them.
the meaning of copal in English from spanish is "incense" the meaning of copal in English from spanish means "incense" it is sometimes put on and used as jewellery
This family name means "Son of Rodrigo", which is the Spanish form of "Roderick", meaning "Famous Power".
Dolores (Dolor is Spanish for pain)
Immediately
No name are not the same in some laungues! My friend is named Shannon and it begins with and E acutally!
The spelling is "país" (with an accent); it means "country".
That is the correct spelling of the verb sacar. The English meaning is "to take out."
Both have the same meaning. Makkah is the Arabic spelling of the city called Mecca in English.
The verb tense are different and words really do not have a direct meaning. For example in English you would ask: "How are you" and in spanish it would be like saying: "You are how"
Spelling is the English meaning for the unscrambled name gneSillp.
The name "Joel" in Spanish is also "Joel." It is not a common Spanish name, but it does not have a different meaning in Spanish compared to English.
the meaning of copal in English from spanish is "incense" the meaning of copal in English from spanish means "incense" it is sometimes put on and used as jewellery
The use of "F" in "Filipino" comes from the Spanish spelling, while the use of "Ph" in "Philippines" comes from the Greek root "philos" meaning "loving" combined with "hippos" meaning "horse." The English spelling for "Philippines" follows the Latin alphabet and the Greek roots, hence the use of "Ph," whereas "Filipino" uses the Spanish spelling with an "F."
PERDÓN, PERO SÓLO HABLO ... (correct spelling and syntax) from Spanish to English reads, "sorry but just talk."
A homophone is a word that is pronounced the same as another word but with a different meaning and spelling. There is no English homophone for the word 'apparel.'
"Now" is an English equivalent of the Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish word ora. The adverb also may be found in the same spelling but with the different use as the present imperative "Pray!" or the present indicative "He (one, she) prays" in Portuguese and Spanish or "You pray" in Cariocan Portuguese. Regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation will be "O-ra" in Italian and Spanish and "O-ruh" in Cariocan and continental Portuguese.
your spelling is wrong ,its deja meaning ! leave.