it is Nevada it means snowcapped in spanish.
It means "What state are you from?" Literally: "From what state are you?"
"Montana" sounds like the Spanish "montaña". However, "montana" (with a normal "n") is not a Spanish word.
"Montaña" in Spanish means "mountain". In the state name, the tilde over the "n" was dropped, and the pronunciation anglicised. In Spanish it is mohn-TAHN -ya, but in English the state name is mon-TAN-ah.
The word "amor" means love or to love.The state of being in love could be "enamorado."
When Utah and Nevada split the territory, the original territorial name of "Sierra Nevada" was shortened to the current name of Nevada, the Spanish word meaning "snowy range", " snow-capped" or "snow-clad." Even though Nevada is the driest state, explorers based its name on the prominent mountains, the Sierra Nevada range. They paid little attention to the weather in other remote parts of the state. Nevada is named after the Sierra Nevada mountain range. The word Nevada is of Spanish origin and means snow-covered or snowy. The mountains of Nevada get a lot of snow every year.
Nevada was named after â??Sierra Nevadaâ?? which is a Spanish feminine word that means mountain in the range. Nevada is a state in the western region of the United States.
I'm not sure what you're asking, but I know that the state of Nevada is derived from the Spanish word for "snowy" or "snow-covered" (meaning it's proper pronunciation should be "nay-va-da," not "neh-vaaaah-duh," but that's something to argue with the locals about), Florida means flowery, and Montana means mountain.
The name Nevada is derived from the nearby Sierra Nevada mountains, which means "snow-capped mountain range" in Spanish.
The State of Nevada.Nevada is a Spanish noun for "Snow fall". It is also an adjective to accompany a feminine noun, where it describes that noun to be (something) covered by snow. For example, if I say Sierra Nevada, where "sierra" is Spanish for a type of mountain range, I am saying that it is a mountain range covered by snow.In the case of the State of Nevada, the feminine noun likely became tacit over time.
Nevada is the Spanish word for snowfall; snow-capped or snow-clad. The state name is the same in Spanish and English. See the link below for more information on the origin of state names of US states.
From out at sea Spanish sailors gazed upon the beautiful mountain ranges of California. They called these mountains Sierra Nevada (snowy range). Sierra Nevada seemed an apt name for the new territory that was being carved out of Utah, but when the deed was done in 1859, the name of this new territory had been shortened to Nevada. As far back as 1857 many names were used to refer to the area that became Nevada, IE: Sierra Nevada Territory; Washoe Territory; Carson Territory; Eastern Slope; Humboldt; Esmeralda; Sierra Plata; Oro Plata and Bullion. But in 1864 the land emerged as "Nevada" a Spanish word meaning snow-covered.
the Nevada state name is short for Sierra Nevadas
The name of the state Montana comes from the Spanish word montaña, which means "mountain", not "mountainous". In fact, the word montana is the Latin word for "mountainous", in its feminine form.
it is Nevada it means snowcapped in spanish.
The term "nevada" means snow-clad or snow-covered, and the US state was named for its high snowy mountains.
The Sierra Nevada snowy mountain rangeis a mountain range in the U.S. states of California and Nevada, between the California Central Valley and the Basin and Range Province. Sierra Nevada means snowy hill. The Nevada state has some land of the Sierra Nevada mountain.