<h2>Further beyond</h2>
Spanish's national motto is “<u>plus ultra</u>” (English: further beyond). <u>A reversal of the original phrase Non terrae plus ultra (“No land beyond”), which was the motto of Charles V</u>, a monarch of the Holy Roman Empire from 24 February 1500 to 21 September 1558.
<em>Hope this helps :)</em>
Answer:
Please See the Answer in the attached pdf file.
Explanation:
Answer:
c. short sword and neck protector
Answer:
Both <em>los </em>and <em>las</em> are definite articles for plural nouns in the Spanish language. The difference is that<em> </em><em>los</em> is used for plural masculine nouns (plural form of <em>el</em>), while <em>las</em> is used for plural feminine nouns (plural form of <em>la</em>). As a good example, we can take the names of cities Los Angeles and Las Vegas. Los Angeles is actually the plural form of <em>el angel</em>, meaning<em> the angel</em>, while the singular form of Las Vegas is <em>la vega</em>, meaning <em>the meadow</em>.
Another example:
el perro - the dog los perros - the dogs
la vaca - the cow las vacas - the cows
I love it keep it up it looks so cute