There may be many languages spoken in Dallas depending on who you are talking to. The official language is English, of course, but there may be people who are bilingual or multilingual and know many different languages like French, German, Italian, American Sign Language and many more.
There aren't any Spanish words that end in K. K is not used in Spanish writing, except in a very few loan words from English and other foreign languages.
Creole languages, such as Haitian Creole, originate from a combination of Spanish and French with influences from West African languages. These languages developed among communities where Spanish and French speakers interacted, resulting in a unique blend of vocabulary and grammar from both European languages.
No !!!!Playin in Barcelona , he doesnt require English
In Puerto Rico's middle schools, elementary schools and high schools they speak Spanish, in all classes, except the English class wich is in English. However there are English speaking private schools. Remeber that our first language is Spanish and then English.
English, Dutch, and Afrikaans.
Its exactly the same as in English except with a Spanish accent.
The same way as you do in English, except that you translate them in Spanish.
Yes. All the countries of South and Central America speak Spanish, except for Brazil, which uses the related Portuguese and three small countries on its border which use the languages of their former colonial masters: English, Dutch and French.
Every Continent except Australia has many countries with many major languages. Here is a summary:North America = English, Spanish, and FrenchSouth America = Spanish, PortugueseAfrica = Arabic, Swahili, English, FrenchAsia = Mandarin, Japanese, Korean, Thai, Arabic, HindiEurope = English French, Spanish, German, Dutch, Swedish, RussianAustralia = EnglishAntarctica = none
1. Spanish 2. Portuguese 3. English 4. Indian languages 5. French 6. Dutch (Surinam) 7. German (Argentina and Paraguay) 8. Japanese (Chile) The first two are far and away the most common. English is a second language except in Guyana.
"Hispanic beauty" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase belleza hispana. The feminine singular noun and adjective model a difference between the two languages whereby English has adjectives comes before, not after, their nouns while Spanish typically has them follow, except for emphasis. The pronunciation will be "besh-SHEY-sa ee-SPA-na" in Uruguayan Spanish, "bezh-ZHEY-sa ee-SPA-na" in Argentinian Spanish, and "bey-YEY-sa ee-SPA-na" in Spanish elsewhere.
All languages in which words are inflected variably according to gender, number or case use declension. This includes all the Indo-European languages, even English, although English declension has all but disappeared except in the pronoun.