The Spanish city that has those letters is Madrid.
"ere" does not exist in Spanish. Possibly you are referring to "er" which is one of the five vowels in the Spanish alphabet. "Erre" refers to the Spanish letter "R", which is pronounced differently than in English.
"Tu ere maricon" is Spanish slang and an offensive way of saying "you are a gay." It is derogatory and should not be used as it promotes discrimination and homophobia. It is important to treat others with respect and kindness, regardless of their sexual orientation.
"Men tu ere de lo mio" is informal Spanish slang that roughly translates to "you are one of my own." It is often used to express loyalty or a strong connection with someone.
air, ere, err
Ere is a preposition that is a palindrome.
It's a mixture of letter-names and 'you', presumably 'yo', meaning 'I', but not the name for that letter, which is 'i' ('ee'). If this analysis is correct, the word is 'Madrid' M - eme A - a D - de R - ere I - (you=yo=) i D -de
eke, eme, ere, eve, ewe, eye
bee, eme, ere, mem, reb, ree, rem
Translation: Su nombre es Kim/Se llama Kim.
sinceramente s= ese, i= i, n= ene, c= ce, e= e, r= ere, a= a, m= eme, e= e, n= ene, t= te , e= e
"ere" does not exist in Spanish. Possibly you are referring to "er" which is one of the five vowels in the Spanish alphabet. "Erre" refers to the Spanish letter "R", which is pronounced differently than in English.
That is the correct spelling of "septiembre" (Spanish for September). (month names are not usually capitalized in Spanish) It spells out as follows (letter: Spanish name: how pronounced): S - ese (ESSay) E - e (ay) P - pe (pay) T - te (tay) I - i (ee) E - e (ay) M - eme (EMMay) B - be (bay) R - ere (ERRay) E - e (ay)
C A R A C A S - Caracas
'metzger' is German for 'butcher' = 'carnicero' in Spanish. If you mean 'Metzger' as a name, perhaps, and how to spell it out in Spanish: M - eme (EMMay) E - e (ay) T - te (tay) Z - ceta (THAYtah - 'TH' as in 'thin') G - ge (khay - 'kh' as in 'loch') E - e (ay) R - ere (ERRay)
ele-i-be-ere-o
It is pronounced "eRe" (Air-eh!)
3-letter word for poetic before is 'ere.'