Yes, It does on the 'e' it's written Josè
Azul is a Spanish word meaning "blue" and it does not have an accent mark.
The word "hola" can in fact have an accent, depending on who is saying it. It's a Spanish word, so someone of actual Spanish descent may have an accent while saying the word.
No, the word "sabe" does not have an accent mark in Spanish. The accent mark is not needed because it follows the normal rules of stress in the Spanish language. "Sabe" is the third person singular form of the verb "saber," meaning "to know."
In Spanish grammer, the rule is: If a word ends in a vowel, an s, or an n, the accent falls on the second to last syllable.
If you mean the imperfect past tens of "saber" in Spanish, then yes. sabía
if = si (withOUT the accent mark) yes = Sí (with the accent mark)
The Spanish word for "cheese" is "queso", no accent mark.
No. Now, if you spell it out as "televisión", you do use an accent mark.
There's no accent on antes.
No, it does not.
siNote: the word for yes in Spanish is síwith an accent mark. The word for "if" is "si" without an accent mark."Si," not to be confused with "sí" (notice the accent), which means "yes."
The word "Fui" in spanish does not have an accent mark. In Spanish ui always makes the sound as the English word "WE" The emphasis is already on the I.
Azul is a Spanish word meaning "blue" and it does not have an accent mark.
The word "hola" can in fact have an accent, depending on who is saying it. It's a Spanish word, so someone of actual Spanish descent may have an accent while saying the word.
No, the word "sabe" does not have an accent mark in Spanish. The accent mark is not needed because it follows the normal rules of stress in the Spanish language. "Sabe" is the third person singular form of the verb "saber," meaning "to know."
The English word "arithmetic" carries no accent mark. The equivalent Spanish word 'aritmetica' has an accent over the 'e'.
Yes, "hacienda" does not have an accent mark. In Spanish, the word is pronounced as it is spelled, and its syllable structure does not require an accent mark for proper pronunciation. The term refers to a large estate or ranch, typically in a Spanish-speaking country.