Greek and Spanish are not similar languages. They belong to different language families, with Greek being part of the Hellenic branch of the Indo-European family and Spanish being a Romance language derived from Latin. While there may be some loanwords or similarities in vocabulary due to historical interactions, the grammar, syntax, and overall structure of the two languages are quite different.
Greek and Spanish sound similar because they both belong to the same language family, known as the Indo-European language family. This means they share common linguistic roots and have undergone similar historical developments over time, leading to similarities in vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation.
Both the Greek and Spanish languages have similar vowel sounds and stress patterns. Additionally, both languages have a relatively consistent pronunciation of letters and sounds.
"It's all Greek to me" (es griego para mí) does exist too in Spanish literature. The most common in both written and spoken Spanish though, at least in Spain, is "me están hablando en chino" (they are speaking Chinese to me).
I prefer Greek cuisine over Spanish cuisine.
Not really nothing is really similar to Greek. Latin is the most similar language to Greek so therefore Italian and Spanish are the most similar languages today to Greek but Greek is probably the 7th most language similar to them. Some words are the same though, e.g Piscina, fantastica, technologia, putana, programa, fantasma, porta, moderno. A lot of the surnames are similar though. Kyrgiakos / Ciriaco Zannis / Zanni Mantzounis / Manzoni Kapelis / Cappelli Roussis / Rossi Papandreas / Papandrea Grekos / Greco Romanos / Romano Marinis / Marini + 100s more.
I speak both lanuages and there are quite a few similar words and also the way the languages work are almost identical. However Spanish is more similar to French and Italian than it is to Greek.
Greek and Spanish sound similar because they both belong to the same language family, known as the Indo-European language family. This means they share common linguistic roots and have undergone similar historical developments over time, leading to similarities in vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation.
Both the Greek and Spanish languages have similar vowel sounds and stress patterns. Additionally, both languages have a relatively consistent pronunciation of letters and sounds.
"It's all Greek to me" (es griego para mí) does exist too in Spanish literature. The most common in both written and spoken Spanish though, at least in Spain, is "me están hablando en chino" (they are speaking Chinese to me).
The etymology of the word "guitar" is early 17th century: from Spanish guitarra (partly via French), from Greek kithara, denoting an instrument similar to the lyre.
I prefer Greek cuisine over Spanish cuisine.
Catholic religion and Greek Christianity are somewhat similar, but other Greek religions are not similar to the Catholic religion.
No, Greek technology was not similar Roman technology. Rome might have had one Greek technology that they used, but other then that one Greek technology, Roman technology was not similar to Greek technology.
No, Spanish roots are primarily Latin, and Latin come from Greek.
both are greek
Portuguese and Catalan are most similar to Spanish.
* Spanish - como una * Greek - ως ένα * Latin - ............