The Spanish were in California in the 1500's and by the middle 17'00's had turned it over to Mexico.
i dont now
It was named for a fictional island where pagan Amazons lived. It was a 16th century Spanish book that was popular when the Spanish first arrived in what is now California and Baja California. At first the Spanish thought they had discovered an island.
At one time or another, Spain controlled and settled all the land in North America from southern Mexico north to northern California and all of what is now the southern US from California to Florida.
You can say "I want to hug you now" as "Quiero abrazarte ahora" in Spanish.
No, not in the 1700s, but now it's fairly popular.
"what the hell do you want now?!" in Spanish
The Spanish explorers first reached California in 1542, led by Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo. They landed in what is now San Diego.
"Ahora". If you want it immediatly would be "ya"
Paseta isn't that the same thing as peso
Te deseo inmediatamente
The Chumash Indians once lived along the California coast with a territory that covered about 7,000 square miles. When the Spanish mission systems came about in the 1700s, the Chumash Indian tribe began to fade away. By the 1800s they had been decimated.
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