spaniard

IPA: spˈænjɝd

Root Word: Spaniard

noun

  • A person from Spain or of Spanish descent.
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Examples of "spaniard" in Sentences

  • Well, native america with some spaniard for Mexicans, iirc, but the other countries are mostly spaniard now.
  • I think the spaniard was pronouncing it as if it were spanish and Georgia knows how it is really pronounced.
  • The term spaniard was implemented in S XVII, when the english want to mention with a injurious term to the spanish.
  • The guy in the red suit is Vega, the boxer that looks like Mike Tyson is M Bison, and the spaniard with the claws is Balrog.
  • It didn't sound like she was from Barcelona, although I myself hadn't the faintest idea what a native spaniard might even begin to sound like.
  • It's the time of pride and joy for the world number one Rafael Nadal when he beat the spaniard Fernando Verdasco on January 30 after a great struggle.
  • Ask a spaniard wanting to “take the bus” (coger el bus) in Latin America, and people laughing at him because of his apparent horniness towards public transport …
  • Those appear in the accounts as investments and therefore in the negative column for Spain, while if a spaniard buys a bmw it appears in the german accounts as a sale.
  • What the diagram says is that if you combine the three, what you get is babies with pierced ears; it does say that this is the only place where babies with pierced ears can be found. spaniard Says:
  • I enjoyed the stories of her affair with Frida, of the spaniard that went looking for her and found her singing for drinks in a bar in Mexico, brought her to Spain where she cleaned up and he started recording her.

Related Links

synonyms for spaniarddescribing words for spaniard
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