- El (deity) - Wikipedia
Archaeological texts show El's association with eternity, creation, and divine authority, often with a consort similar to Asherah Later sources, including Phoenician and Hellenistic writings, sometimes equated El with other deities such as Cronus or Poseidon
- Él | Spanish to English Translation - SpanishDictionary. com
Pronunciation Native-speaker video pronunciations Word of the Day el villancico Christmas carol Translate Anything with Premium
- El vs Él: Key Differences in Spanish - Tell Me In Spanish
El vs él are two different words El without an accent is a definite article (the) and more often it’s placed before concrete singular masculine nouns Él with an accent is a pronoun for the 3rd person singular: it replaces a male subject or object
- Difference between él and el in Spanish (he or the)
Learn Difference between él and el in Spanish (he or the) and get fluent faster with Kwiziq Spanish Access a personalised study list, thousands of test questions, grammar lessons and reading, writing and listening exercises
- él vs el in Spanish | HOLA SPANISH - YouTube
Today, we're going to have a look at the difference between 'él' with a written accent and 'el' without the written accent in Spanish Do you know the difference? Practice in the comments below
- él | Diccionario panhispánico de dudas | RAE - ASALE
Pese a ser un monosílabo, debe llevar tilde para distinguirse del artículo el (→ tilde2, 3 1): «Él tenía el poder» (Mastretta Vida [Méx 1990]) 2 Sobre su funcionamiento dentro del conjunto de los pronombres tónicos y su aparición o elisión cuando es sujeto, → pronombres personales tónicos
- El o él – Cuándo se tilda [con ejemplos súper fáciles]
El, sin tilde, es un artículo Él, con tilde, es un pronombre Si los términos son confusos, ahora veremos unos ejemplos de cómo se usan para que quede más claro
- English Translation of “ÉL” | Collins Spanish-English Dictionary
El carro es de él The car is his Collins American Learner’s English-Spanish Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers All rights reserved Spanish Easy Learning Grammar How do you use subject pronouns in Spanish? In Spanish, subject pronouns are equivalent to words such as I, he, she and they in English
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