In the Canary Islands the plural "you" is always "ustedes", while in neutral Spanish "vosotros" is used in informal conversations and "ustedes" only in very formal ones. In the Canary Islands they have aspiration of the "s". So "s" at the end of a syllabe sounds more like an Engli...
“Cattle” is a plural term that can generally reference any of the bovine species. A dairy cow is a single bovine female that produces milk. Different than the beef cattle industry, but still bovine in nature, dairy farming is another industry of massive proportions. According to the USDA, ...
Article preview Abstract Introduction Section snippets References (84) Cited by (28)Marine Geology Volume 358, December 2014, Pages 12-17What is a mega-tsunami? Author links open overlay panelJames Goff a, James P. Terry b 1, Catherine Chagué-Goff a c 2, Kazuhisa Goto d 3Show more...
Everything on the table was in silver too, and two footmen, with red hair and canary-coloured uniforms, stood on either side of the sideboard. Mr. Crawley said a long grace, and Sir Pitt said amen, and the great silver dish-covers were removed. "What have we for dinner, Betsy?" ...
A grandes rasgos hay diferencias en la fonética de ciertos sonidos y en bastante vocabulario. Es ...
Traedis the second-personal informal plural imperative oftraer. Note that the plural form is used here even though its subject —el rey como el labriego(the king as well as the farmhand) — would be grammatically singular in English. As a general rule in Spanish, two singular nouns joined...
“She played it to the hilt as an over-inebriated soprano trying tosingin an operetta.” Verb ▲ To make melodious whistling and twittering sounds, such as of a bird or electronic device “The bird began tosingstill more melodically, and then fluttered its wings and flew from its branch,...
The language first arrived in Cuba with seafarers from the Canary Islands, meaning that Cuban Spanish is descended from Castilian Spanish. This variation of the Spanish language is particularly notable for its weak pronunciation of consonants.
) A narrow passage; esp., a contracted part of a stream, lake, or sea; a strait connecting two bodies of water; -- usually in the plural; as, The Narrows of New York harbor. Narrowed (imp. & p. p.) of Narrow Narrowing (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Narrow Narrow (v. t.) To ...