spanish

listen to the pronunciation of spanish
الإنجليزية - التركية
İspanyolca

Benim ana dilim İspanyolca'dır. - My mother tongue is Spanish.

İspanyolca onun ana dilidir. - Spanish is her native language.

{s} İspanyol

İspanyolca onun ana dilidir. - Spanish is her native language.

İspanyolca onun ana dilidir. - Spanish is her mother tongue.

ispanya'ya özgü
ispanyol

İspanyolca onun ana dilidir. - Spanish is her mother tongue.

İspanyolca onun ana dilidir. - Spanish is her native language.

ispanyollar

Rusların İspanyolca öğrenmesi İspanyolların Rusça öğrenmesinden çok daha kolay. - It's a lot easier for Russians to learn Spanish, than it is for Spaniards to learn Russian.

İspanyollar biraz geç saatte yemek yerler. - The Spanish eat a bit late.

ispanyolca

İspanyolca onun ana dilidir. - Spanish is her mother tongue.

Benim ana dilim İspanyolca'dır. - My mother tongue is Spanish.

{i} İspanyollar

Rusların İspanyolca öğrenmesi İspanyolların Rusça öğrenmesinden çok daha kolay. - It's a lot easier for Russians to learn Spanish, than it is for Spaniards to learn Russian.

İspanyollar biraz geç saatte yemek yerler. - The Spanish eat a bit late.

{s} İspanyol; İspanya, İspanya'ya özgü
ispanya

Johnny sadece birkaç ay önce İspanya'ya taşındı, o henüz İspanyolca konuşmaya alışkın değil. - Johnny moved to Spain just a few months ago, so he isn't used to speaking Spanish as yet.

İspanya'da İspanyolca konuşulur. - In Spain they speak Spanish.

ıspanyollar
ıspanyol
ıspanyolca
spanish language
ispanyol dili
spanish ling
(Denizbilim) uzungelincik balığı
spanish literature
ispanyol edebiyatı
spanish mackerel
(Hayvan Bilim, Zooloji) kolyos
spanish moss
bir tür tillandsia
spanish peseta
(Bilgisayar) ispanyol pesetası
spanish sparrow
söğüt serçesi
Spanish flu
(Tıp, İlaç) İspanyol gribi
spanish as a foreign language
Bir yabancı dil olarak ispanyolca
spanish fly
(ecza) Kuduzböceğinden yapılan bir ilâç
spanish for eggs
yumurta için ispanyolca
spanish inquisition
İspanyol Engizisyonu
spanish netherlands
ispanyolca hollanda
spanish onion
ispanyolca soğan
spanish rice
ispanyolca pirinç
spanish soccer association
İspanyol futbol derneği
spanish thistle
(Botanik, Bitkibilim) Kolgan, (bot.) Carduus acarna
spanish, castilian
CAStilian ispanyolca
spanish; hispanic: hispanophile
ispanyolca, latin amerikalı: hispanophile
Spanish America
Kuzey, Orta ve Güney Amerika'daki İspanyolca konuşan ülkeler
Spanish bayonet
bot. avizeağacı
Spanish dagger fibre
(Tekstil) pita lifi
Spanish fly
(Zooloji) kuduzböceği
Spanish fly
afrodizyak olarak kullanılan kurutulmuş kuduzböceği tozu
Spanish moss
bot. bir tür tillandsia
spanish american
latin amerikalı
spanish bayonet
avizeağacı
spanish campaign medal
(Askeri) İSPANYA HARBİ MADALYASI: 1898'de İspanya ile yapılan harpteki hizmeti belirten madalya
spanish chestnut
(isim) kestane
spanish chestnut
{i} kestane
spanish dagger fibre
pita
spanish drama
ispanyol draması
spanish fiction
ispanyol romanı
spanish fly
kunduzböceği
spanish fly
kuduzböceği
spanish mackerel
kolyoz
spanish modern
(Bilgisayar) ispanyolca modern
spanish modern
modern ispanyolca
spanish oak
bodur meşe
spanish poetry
ispanyol şiiri
spanish tile
(İnşaat) oluklu kiremit
spanish war service medal
(Askeri) İSPANYA HARBİ HİZMET MADALYASI: 1898 ve 1899 yılları arasındaki hizmetleri İspanya Harbi Madalyasına hak kazanacak derecede olmayan şahıslara verilen madalya
the spanish
ispanya halkı
i don't speak spanish
İspanyolca konuşamıyorum
i need an english spanish dictionary
İngilizce İspanyolca sözlük arıyorum
the Spanish
İspanyollar, İspanya halkı
the Spanish
İspanyollar
traditional spanish
geleneksel ispanyolca
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
Of or pertaining to Spain

Whether Martial's heart was in the Spanish highlands or whether he was happy enough in Rome will be discussed later.

Of or pertaining to the people or culture of Spain

Spanish cuisine is not as spicy hot as Mexican, but it is flavorful and bright.

People of Hispanic origin

Sixty-four percent more Spanish are functionally illiterate compared to Anglos in Lubbock (only 15 percent more of nonwhites than Anglos).

Of or pertaining to the Spanish language

Fundamentally, the Spanish vowel sounds are only five, even though as a matter of fact there may be different other sounds for such vowels as , and .

A Romance language primarily spoken in Spain and in the Americas

In contrast with the creole languages discussed above, the article systems of Rumanian, French, Spanish, and Portuguese are more complex, since neutralization fails to occur to a large extent.

People of Spain, collectively

The Spanish are not the only ones selling their goods along the wharves and the inner streets.

To subject to spanishing, a printing process in which an ink is deposited on the bottoms and sides of depressions formed in a plastic material
{n} an earth used in making bricks, the language of Spain
{a} coming from or belonging to Spain
{i} Romance language spoken in Spain and most of Latin America; people of Spain
Spanish means belonging or relating to Spain, or to its people, language, or culture. a Spanish sherry. the Spanish Ambassador
The Spanish are the people who come from Spain. relating to Spain, its people, or its language. adj. Armada Spanish Spanish influenza epidemic Spanish Mission style Spanish Civil War Spanish language Spanish Main Spanish moss Spanish Netherlands Spanish Succession War of the Spanish American War Spanish Sahara Spanish Guinea Ferdinand the Catholic Spanish Fernando el Católico La Pasionaria Spanish: The Passionflower
{s} of or pertaining to Spain, of or pertaining to the people or language of Spain
Spanish is the main language spoken in Spain, and in many countries in South and Central America
Of, from, or pertaining to Spain
the Romance language spoken in most of Spain and the countries colonized by Spain the people of Spain of or relating to or characteristic of Spain or the people of Spain; "Spanish music
The language of Spain
Of or pertaining to Spain or the Spaniards
Sp
Spanish Arabic
Andalusian Arabic (language)
Spanish Armada
the fleet of war ships sent by Philip II of Spain against England in 1588
Spanish Flu
Alternative spelling of Spanish flu
Spanish Guinea
A former colony of Spain and country in Africa, now called Equatorial Guinea
Spanish Influenza
Alternative capitalization of Spanish influenza
Spanish Inquisition
Excessive questioning or interrogation

I agreed to answer a few questions, but I didn't expect the Spanish Inquisition.

Spanish Inquisition
an extension of the Papal Inquisition, set up in 15th century Spain, to investigate and punish converted Jews and Muslims thought to be insincere
Spanish Main
The mainland coast of Spanish America
Spanish Sahara
The territory of Western Sahara
Spanish Town
Jamaica's third largest city, capital until 1872
Spanish Water Dog
A herding water dog originating in Spain
Spanish Water Dogs
plural form of Spanish Water Dog
Spanish chestnut
Fruit of this tree
Spanish chestnut
A deciduous tree with edible deep brown nutlike fruits. The fruits have a little white, fluffy tail
Spanish chestnuts
plural form of Spanish chestnut
Spanish donkey
A torture device consisting of a very narrow vertical surface where the victim is supposed to sit with heavy objects attached to their feet
Spanish donkeys
plural form of Spanish donkey
Spanish fever
Same as Texas fever
Spanish flu
Short form for Spanish influenza
Spanish influenza
An influenza pandemic that spread to nearly every part of the world between 1918 and 1920, killing from 20 to 100 million people
Spanish iris
a bulbous iris Iris xiphium from the western Mediterranean; it has violet-purple flowers with a short perianth tube
Spanish omelet
A Spanish dish consisting of an egg omelet with fried potatoes and, often, onions
Spanish omelets
plural form of Spanish omelet
Spanish omelette
An egg omelette made with fried potatoes
Spanish omelettes
plural form of Spanish omelette
Spanish practices
Irregular practices in favour of the workers at a place of work, which are implied, but not specified, in the work contract
Spanish walk
A movement in which the horse raises the forelegs off the ground in an extreme upward and out manner, with much expression
Spanish America
The former Spanish possessions in the New World, including most of South and Central America, Mexico, Cuba, Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic, and other small islands in the Caribbean Sea
Spanish Armada
Great fleet sent by Philip II of Spain in 1588 to invade England in conjunction with a Spanish army from Flanders. Philip was motivated by a desire to restore the Roman Catholic faith in England and by English piracies against Spanish trade and possessions. The Armada, commanded by the duke of Medina-Sidonia, consisted of about 130 ships. In the weeklong battle, the Spanish suffered defeat after the English launched fire ships into the Spanish fleet, breaking the ships' formation and making them susceptible to the English ships' heavy guns. Many Spanish ships were also lost during the long voyage home, and a total of perhaps 15,000 Spaniards died. The defeat of the Armada, in which Francis Drake played a principal role, saved England and the Netherlands from possible absorption into the Spanish empire
Spanish Civil War
About 500,000 people died in the war, and all Spaniards were deeply scarred by the trauma. The war's end brought a period of dictatorship that lasted until the mid-1970s
Spanish Civil War
a war fought in Spain, from 1936 to 1939, between the right-wing nationalists, led by General Franco, and the left-wing Republicans. Many people from other countries joined the International Brigade to help the Republicans, including well-known writers and poets such as George Orwell, and the US writer Ernest Hemingway wrote about the war as a news reporter. The Nationalists won the war, and from 1939 to 1975 Spain was ruled by Franco. (1936-39) Military revolt against the government of Spain. After the 1936 elections produced a Popular Front government supported mainly by left-wing parties, a military uprising began in garrison towns throughout Spain, led by the rebel Nationalists and supported by conservative elements in the clergy, military, and landowners as well as the fascist Falange. The ruling Republican government, led by the socialist premiers Francisco Largo Caballero and Juan Negrín (1894-1956) and the liberal president Manuel Azaña y Díaz, was supported by workers and many in the educated middle class as well as militant anarchists and communists. Government forces put down the uprising in most regions except parts of northwestern and southwestern Spain, where the Nationalists held control and named Francisco Franco head of state. Both sides repressed opposition; together, they executed or assassinated more than 50,000 suspected enemies to their respective causes. Seeking aid from abroad, the Nationalists received troops, tanks, and planes from Nazi Germany and Italy, which used Spain as a testing ground for new methods of tank and air warfare. The Republicans (also called loyalists) were sent matériel mainly by the Soviet Union, and the volunteer International Brigades also joined the Republicans. The two sides fought fierce and bloody skirmishes in a war of attrition. The Nationalist side gradually gained territory and by April 1938 succeeded in splitting Spain from east to west, causing 250,000 Republican forces to flee into France. In March 1939 the remaining Republican forces surrendered, and Madrid, beset by civil strife between communists and anticommunists, fell to the Nationalists on March
Spanish Inquisition
{i} Inquisition in Spain from 1480 to 1834 that protected the orthodoxy of Catholicism in Spain and under which an extremely large number of people (especially Jewish people) were tortured and executed
Spanish Main
shores of Spain
Spanish Main
the area around the coast of northern South America, from which Spanish ships carried gold and treasure back to Spain during the 16th and 17th centuries. Many of these ships were attacked by pirates, and there are many stories and films about the exciting adventures of the people who sailed the Spanish Main. Northern coast of South America. The term refers to an area that was once under Spanish control and spanned roughly between the Isthmus of Panama and the delta of the Orinoco River. The term can also refer to the Caribbean Sea and adjacent waters, especially when referring to the period when the region was troubled by pirates
Spanish Netherlands
Spanish-held provinces in the southern Low Countries (roughly corresponding to modern Belgium and Luxembourg). In 1578 the diplomat Alessandro Farnese was sent to represent Spain in the Netherlands, and by 1585 he had reestablished Spanish control over the southern provinces, ending the union with the northern provinces that followed the Pacification of Ghent. In the 17th century the region saw a resurgence of economic and intellectual growth. As a buffer between Protestant and Catholic states, the region was the scene of constant warfare; areas were ceded to the Dutch Republic (1648) and France (1659). The territory began to decline in the late 17th century. Spanish control was lost after the War of the Spanish Succession, when the region passed to Emperor Charles VI and became the Austrian Netherlands
Spanish Peaks
Adjacent mountains, 3,868 m (12,683 ft) and 4,155 m (13,623 ft) high, in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains of southern Colorado. They were landmarks for early explorers and traders
Spanish River
A river, about 241 km (150 mi) long, of southern Ontario, Canada, flowing generally south to Lake Huron
Spanish Steps
some famous steps built in the 18th century, that climb to the main French church in Rome, the Trinita dei Monti
Spanish bayonet
Any of several New World plants of the genus Yucca, especially Y. aloifolia or Y. baccata, having a tall woody stem, stiff swordlike pointed leaves, and a large cluster of white flowers
Spanish citizen
{i} citizen of Spain (country in southwestern Europe)
Spanish fly
{i} cantharides; bright green European blister beetle; toxic medicinal powder made from the dried body of this beetle (formerly used to treat skin blisters and as a counterirritant and was also taken as an aphrodisiac)
Spanish language
Romance language spoken in Spain and in large parts of the New World. It has more than 332 million speakers, including more than 23 million in the U.S. Its earliest written materials date from the 10th century, its first literary works from 1150. The Castilian dialect, the source of modern standard Spanish, arose in the 9th century in north-central Spain (Old Castile) and spread to central Spain (New Castile) by the 11th century. In the late 15th century the kingdoms of Castile, León, and Aragon merged, and Castilian became the official language of all Spain, with Catalan and Galician (effectively a dialect of Portuguese) becoming regional languages and Aragonese and Leonese reduced to a fraction of their original speech areas. Latin American regional dialects are derived from Castilian but differ from it in phonology
Spanish lime
{i} guinep, tropical American tree that bears fruit; sweet juicy lime fruit of the guinep
Spanish mackerel
Any of various marine food fishes of the genus Scomberomorus, especially a commercially important species, S. maculatus, of American Atlantic coastal waters
Spanish moss
An epiphytic bromeliad plant (Tillandsia usneoides) of the southeast United States and tropical America, having gray threadlike stems drooping in long, densely matted clusters. Epiphyte (Tillandsia usneoides) in the pineapple family, found in southern North America, the West Indies, and Central and South America. It often hangs in large, beardlike, silvery-gray masses from trees and other plants and even on telephone poles, but it is not parasitic or structurally intertwined with its host. It takes in carbon dioxide and rainwater or dew for photosynthesis through tiny, hairlike scales that cover its threadlike leaves and long, threadlike stems. It absorbs nutrients from dust and solvents in rainwater, or from decaying organic matter around its aerial roots. Stalkless yellow flowers appear rarely. Spanish moss is sometimes used as a filler in packing boxes and upholstery, and around potted plants or floral arrangements
Spanish omelet
An omelet served with an often spicy sauce of tomatoes, onions, and peppers
Spanish onion
A mild-flavored, yellow-skinned onion (Allium fistulosum) having yellowish-white flowers
Spanish paprika
A mild seasoning made from pimientos
Spanish rice
A dish consisting of rice cooked with tomatoes, spices, chopped onions, and green peppers
Spanish-American War
brief war between the United States and Spain in 1898 over Spanish rule in Cuba (resulted in Cuban independence and American annexation of Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines)
Spanish-American War
A war between Spain and the United States in 1898, as a result of which Spain ceded Puerto Rico, the Philippine Islands, and Guam to the United States and abandoned all claim to Cuba, which became independent in 1902. a war in 1898 between the US and Spain, which the US started because it wanted Cuba to be independent from Spain and because the US battleship Maine was mysteriously destroyed by an explosion near Havana, Cuba. After Spain was defeated, Cuba became independent, and the US took control of the islands of the Philippines, Guam, and Puerto Rico. Theodore Roosevelt, who later became president, first became famous through his military success in this war, when he led a group of men called the Rough Riders. (1898) Conflict between the U.S. and Spain that ended Spanish colonial rule in the New World. The war originated in Cuba's struggle for independence. The newspapers of William Randolph Hearst fanned U.S. sympathy for the rebels, which increased after the unexplained destruction of the U.S. warship Maine on Feb. 15, 1898. Congress passed resolutions declaring Cuba's right to independence and demanding that Spain withdraw its armed forces. Spain declared war on the U.S. on April
Spanish-American War
Commo. George Dewey led the naval squadron that defeated the Spanish fleet in the Philippines (see Battle of Manila Bay) on May 1, and Gen.William Shafter led regular troops and volunteers (including future U.S. president Theodore Roosevelt and his Rough Riders) in the destruction of Spain's Caribbean Sea fleet near Santiago, Cuba (July 17). In the Treaty of Paris (December 10), Spain renounced all claim to Cuba and ceded Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines to the U.S., marking the U.S.'s emergence as a world power
spanish american
an American whose first language is Spanish
spanish american
a resident of Latin America
spanish bayonet
a stiff yucca with a short trunk; found in the southern United States and tropical America; has rigid spine-tipped leaves and clusters of white flowers tall woody-stemmed yucca of southwestern United States and Mexico having stiff swordlike pointed leaves and a large cluster of white flowers
spanish broom
erect shrub of southwestern Europe having racemes of golden yellow flowers tall thornless shrub having pale yellow flowers and flexible rushlike twigs used in basketry; of southwestern Europe and Mediterranean; naturalized in California
spanish cedar
tropical American tree yielding fragrant wood used especially for boxes
spanish chestnut
{i} marron
spanish civil war
civil war in Spain in which General Franco succeeded in overthrowing the republican government; during the war Spain became a battleground for fascists and socialists from all countries; 1936-1939
spanish dagger
arborescent yucca of southwestern United States and northern Mexico with sword-shaped leaves and white flowers yucca of southeastern United States similar to the Spanish bayonets but with shorter trunk and smoother leaves
spanish elm
large tropical American tree of the genus Cordia grown for its abundant creamy white flowers and valuable wood
spanish fly
green beetle of southern Europe
spanish grunt
a kind of grunt
spanish heath
erect dense shrub native to western Iberian peninsula having profuse white or pink flowers; naturalized in southwestern England
spanish inquisition
the Inquisition that guarded the orthodoxy of Catholicism in Spain (especially from the 15th to the 17th centuries)
spanish iris
bulbous iris of western Mediterranean region having usually violet-purple flowers
spanish lime
tropical American tree bearing a small edible fruit with green leathery skin and sweet juicy translucent pulp
spanish mackerel
medium-sized mackerel of temperate Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico any of several large marine food fishes of the genus Scomberomorus flesh of commercially important fishes especially of the Atlantic coastal waters of America
spanish monetary unit
monetary unit in Spain
spanish moss
dense festoons of greenish-gray hairlike flexuous strands anchored to tree trunks and branches by sparse wiry roots; southeastern United States and West Indies to South America
spanish needles
common bur marigold of the eastern United States the seed of bur marigolds
spanish oak
small deciduous tree having the trunk branched almost from the base with spreading branches; Texas and southern Oklahoma
spanish onion
large mild and succulent yellow-skinned onion; often eaten raw
spanish oyster plant
a golden thistle of southwestern Europe cultivated for its edible sweet roots and edible leaves and stalks; its yellow flowers are used as a substitute for saffron
spanish paprika
a mild seasoning made from a variety of pimiento grown in Spain
spanish rice
spicy rice with tomatoes and onions and green peppers
spanish tamarind
shrubby tree of Madagascar occasionally cultivated for its edible apple-shaped fruit
spanish-american war
a war between the United STates and Spain in 1898
spanish-speaking
able to communicate in Spanish
Judaeo-Spanish
a Romance Language, based on Old Spanish, and spoken almost exclusively by Sephardic Jews in Greek and Turkey

Although like most American-born children of immigrants they had failed to develop a fluent use of the mother tongue, both had heard Judaeo-Spanish all their lives and had entirely native habits of pronouncing it.

Latin-American Spanish
The continuum of standard forms of Spanish spoken in Latin America; compare peninsular Spanish
Old Spanish
Early form of the Spanish language that was spoken on the Iberian Peninsula from the 10th century until roughly the beginning of the 15th century, before a consonantic readjustment gave rise to the evolution of Modern Spanish
American Spanish
The Spanish language as used in the Western Hemisphere
Judeo-Spanish
{i} Ladino, Spanish dialect based on old Spanish spoken by Sephardic Jews but written in Hebrew script
La Pasionaria Spanish: The Passionflower
known as La Pasionaria (Spanish: "The Passionflower") born Dec. 9, 1895, Gallarta, near Bilbao, Spain died Nov. 12, 1989, Madrid Spanish communist leader. The daughter of a poor miner, she became radicalized in her youth. In 1918 she published an article using her pseudonym ("The Passionflower"), and in 1920 she joined the new Communist Party of Spain. After a turbulent career, she emerged as a deputy in the Republican parliament. By the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in 1936 she had won fame as a fiery and even violent street orator, and she coined the Republican battle cry, "No pasarán!" ("They shall not pass!"). With Francisco Franco's victory in 1939 she fled to the Soviet Union; she returned in 1977 after his death and the party's relegalization. Reelected to parliament, she resigned because of ill health, but she remained honourary president of the party until her death
Mexican Spanish
The Spanish language as used in Mexico
Old Spanish
Spanish before the middle of the 16th century
War of the Spanish Succession
(1701-14) Conflict arising from the disputed succession to the throne of Spain after the death of the childless Charles II. The Habsburg Charles had named the Bourbon Philip, duke d'Anjou, as his successor; when Philip took the Spanish throne as Philip V, his grandfather Louis XIV invaded the Spanish Netherlands. The former anti-French alliance from the War of the Grand Alliance was revived in 1701 by Britain, the Dutch Republic, and the Holy Roman emperor, who had been promised parts of the Spanish empire by earlier treaties of partition (1698, 1699). The English forces, led by the duke of Marlborough, won a series of victories over France (1704-09), including the Battle of Blenheim, which forced the French out of the Low Countries and Italy. The imperial general, Eugene of Savoy, also won notable victories. In 1711 conflicts within the alliance led to its collapse, and peace negotiations began in 1712. The war concluded with the Peace of Utrecht (1713), which marked the rise of the power of Britain at the expense of both France and Spain, and the Treaties of Rastatt and Baden (1714)
World Spanish Federation
organization of Sephardic Jews
battle of the spanish armada
in the English Channel a small fleet of British ships successfully defeated the large armada sent from Spain by Philip II to invade England
black spanish
They are remarkable as egg layers
black spanish
One of an old and well-known Mediterranean breed of domestic fowls with glossy black plumage, blue legs and feet, bright red comb and wattles, and white face
judeo-spanish
the Spanish dialect spoken by Sephardic Jews but written in the Hebrew script
mexican spanish
the dialect of Spanish spoken in Mexico
war of the spanish succession
a general war in Europe (1701-1714) that broke out when Louis XIV installed his grandson on the throne of Spain; England and Holland hoped to limit Louis' power
spanish

    الواصلة

    Span·ish

    التركية النطق

    spänîş

    المترادفات

    castilian, spaniard, hispanic

    النطق

    /ˈspanəsʜ/ /ˈspænɪʃ/

    علم أصول الكلمات

    () From Middle English Spainish, Spanish, from Spain + -ish.

    فيديوهات

    ... The Spanish themselves don't want to work in the sugar plantations. ...
    ... And the Spanish conquistadors, ...
المفضلات