The insect: mosca
to fly: volar
"Volaré" means "I will fly".
There is a Latin word 'musca' meaning fly. This has passed into the Spanish language as mosquito and means 'little gnat'
Latin Americans call the mosquito a mosquito also, and its name comes from Spanish.-- It is Spanish for "little fly". Fly is mosca and uses the diminutive ito to mean small.
The insect mosquito and their native language. Joking, mosquito means little fly in Spanish and Portuguese. The word evolved from the original Latin word musca for fly.
feminine"there is a fly in my drink" is "tengo una mosca in mi bebida"
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"Fly" in Spanish is "mosca".
Spanish fly was created in 1758.
fly down it
Spanish Fly - album - was created on 1987-05-19.
Mosquito comes ultimately from the Latin word for 'fly', musca (this went back to an Indo-European base *mu-, probably imitative of the sound of humming, which also produced English midge (OE), and hence its derivative midget(19th c.) -- originally a 'tiny sand-fly'). Musca became Spanish mosca, whose diminutive form reached English as mosquito -- etymologically a 'small fly'. (The Italian descendant of musca, incidentally, is also mosca, and its diminutive, moschetto, was applied with black humour to the 'bolt of a crossbow'. From it English gets musket (16th c.).).See also midge, midget, musket
The various different types of spanish fly can be found at tinyurl.com/exotic-things