Those are called cognates. Cognates are words in two languages that have a similar meaning, spelling, and pronunciation due to shared linguistic roots.
One way I know the English language influences the Spanish language, is there are certain words called "cognates". A cognate is a word that looks the same in Spanish than it does in English. For example, the words "perfecto" means "perfect". I'm sure you could have guessed that by looking at the two words, right? That because they are cognates. Another example would be "fantastico" whose meaning is the same as the English word similarly spelled. There are other ways that English influences Spanish, but that's the most obvious way.
This looks like someone used GoogleTranslate to get to Spanish from another language since it is incoherent in Spanish. It literally translates to: "The truth I can speak English but translating"
Vecces is not a Spanish word. But it looks similar to Veces, which means "times".
axidente is not a spanish word. But it looks like accidente, which means accident.
Actually, it is a Spanish word. It means table. The word is also used for a flat topped hill, since it looks like a table.
nombros is spanish and in English it looks and almost sounds the same thing..........the English meaning for "nombros" is numbers
Those words are not in Spanish. It looks like it is an attempt by someone who does not speak English to say or write "How much is it?" "How much is it?" in Spanish is "¿Cuánto es?"
A cognate is a word that sounds like the word with it's same meaning in a different language. An example of an English/Spanish cognate would be: Universe Universo English Spanish
It looks exactly the same as in english.
Roughly - parece delicioso
No. Although the name looks Spanish, the official language is English. The heritage is not Spanish.
supertriste is not a spanish word, but it looks like a combination of the english word super and the spanish word for "sad", so it might mean "supersad"
One way I know the English language influences the Spanish language, is there are certain words called "cognates". A cognate is a word that looks the same in Spanish than it does in English. For example, the words "perfecto" means "perfect". I'm sure you could have guessed that by looking at the two words, right? That because they are cognates. Another example would be "fantastico" whose meaning is the same as the English word similarly spelled. There are other ways that English influences Spanish, but that's the most obvious way.
well, a spanish dancer is a type of fish. it is called the spanish dancer because when it moves it looks like it is "dancing".
It's not an English word. It looks Italian. It looks as if it were based on the Greek root "hystero" meaning the uterus.
Both of them are valid translations. In latin languages the predicative can come before or after the substantive, with no difference in the meaning of the sentence. I don't know how to speak spanish, but I'm Brazilian, and portuguese looks a lot like spanish. :)
The word 'pregunto' when translated from Spanish to English means 'wonder.'