There are two words that can mean "ape" in Spanish. They are "simio" and "mono." Simio is pronounced, "SEE-me-oh." Mono is pronounced, "MOW-no."
quvo is actually slang for two spanish words, "que uvo" wich actually means, whats up
"Why" in Spanish is actually two words. "Por qué" means "why" in Spanish.
Casar= to marry Cazar = to hunt In the western hemisphere these two words sound alike.
'Saber' means, "to know intellectually." It's different than 'conocer' which means, "to know empirically." The correct use of these two words is a minor achievement on the road to learning Spanish.
That would be "la calle" (two words). It means the street.
In spite of 'rodeo, ranch, lasso and lariat', Spanish seems to have incorporated more English. Two areas where this is common are hospitality and manufacturing.
The Spanish words ella dos hermanos translate into English as Her two brothers. These words translate into Italian as i suoi due fratelli.
There are two words that can mean "ape" in Spanish. They are "simio" and "mono." Simio is pronounced, "SEE-me-oh." Mono is pronounced, "MOW-no."
They are just two juxtaposed Spanish words (love [the noun] they [the pronoun]). It doesn't mean anything in Spanish, so it's no surprise that it doesn't mean anything in English either.
quvo is actually slang for two spanish words, "que uvo" wich actually means, whats up
"Why" in Spanish is actually two words. "Por qué" means "why" in Spanish.
Two words in Spanish borrowed from Greek are "teléfono" (telephone) and "filosofía" (philosophy).
Answer: While Spanish has more total speakers, French has a wider distribution of speakers around the globe and is spoken on every continent. French is easier to learn than Spanish; the latter has more irregular verbs, four words that mean 'you', two words that mean 'for', etc. French also sounds nicer.
Two words borrowed from the Spanish language and used in English are "quesadilla" and "fiesta."
It's two words actually "por favor" and it means "please" in Spanish, literally "for favor"
Two and two.