Anne Heutchinson spoke about her religous beliefs
Perhaps you are referring to Spartacus.
"It" if you're referring to the language, unless you're a poet or one of the authors of English as She is Spoke."They" if you're referring to the people.
No, "spoke" is not an abstract noun. It is a concrete noun referring to a slender rod or bar that forms part of a wheel, handle, or other object.
It is a noun is referring to the spokes of a wheel.
Yes, "spoke" is a word. It can be a verb meaning to communicate or express thoughts, or a noun referring to each of the rods or bars that transmit motion from a wheel to the central axis.
It means it is being widely spoke about all over the world.
The accent made it sound as if the missionary was referring to 'my buttocks' repeatedly.
This depends completely on which colony you're referring to. They spoke many different languages. It could be English, Dutch, French, German...
"Spoke" is the past tense of the verb "speak," used when referring to an action that happened in the past. "Spoken" is the past participle of the same verb and is used with auxiliary verbs to form perfect tenses or passive voice. For example, you would say, "She spoke to me yesterday" and "She has spoken to me before."
It is a Biblical allusion to the book of Genesis line 3:19.
If you are referring to the Painter, Tiziano Vecelli, then he spoke Italian.