enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Venezuelan Spanish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venezuelan_Spanish

    Venezuelan Spanish (castellano venezolano or español venezolano) refers to the Spanish spoken in Venezuela. Spanish was introduced in Venezuela by colonists. Most of them were from Galicia, Basque Country, Andalusia, or the Canary Islands. [3] The last has been the most fundamental influence on modern Venezuelan Spanish, and Canarian and ...

  3. Maracucho Spanish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maracucho_Spanish

    The Maracucho Spanish (also called maracaibero, marabino or zuliano) is the variety of Spanish generally spoken in the Zulia state in the northwest of Venezuela and the west of the Falcón state (Mauroa Municipality). Unlike the varieties from Caracas, Venezuelan Llanos or the Venezuelan Andean region, the maracucho is typically voseante.

  4. Languages of Venezuela - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languages_of_Venezuela

    The 1999 Constitution of Venezuela declared Spanish and languages spoken by indigenous people from Venezuela as official languages. Deaf people use Venezuelan Sign Language (lengua de señas venezolana, LSV). Portuguese (185,000) [1] and Italian (200,000), [2] are the most spoken languages in Venezuela after the official language of Spanish.

  5. Trinidadian Spanish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trinidadian_Spanish

    Trinidadian Spanish is closely related to the Spanish found in the east of Venezuela (Sucre, Caribbean Coast) and Margarita Island and shares many features with Caribbean Spanish in general. Due to the Venezuelan presence in Trinidad, it is likely that the local dialect of spoken Spanish will become ever more venezolano or sucrense.

  6. Wayuu language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wayuu_language

    There were an estimated 300,000 speakers of Wayuunaiki in Venezuela in 2012 and another 120,000 in Colombia in 2008, approximately half the ethnic population of 400,000 in Venezuela (2011 census) and 400,000 in Colombia (2018 census). [1] Smith (1995) reports that a mixed Wayuu—Spanish language is replacing Wayuunaiki in both countries.

  7. If you’re a Venezuelan immigrant in the U.S., could you be ...

    www.aol.com/venezuelan-immigrant-u-could...

    Undocumented Venezuelans in the United States could be eligible for Temporary Protected Status under the federal government’s recent expansion of the program, which made about 472,000 additional ...

  8. ‘Disastrous’: Venezuelans in South Florida react to Biden ...

    www.aol.com/disastrous-venezuelans-south-florida...

    The swap follows reductions in sanctions and other U.S. efforts to encourage free and fair elections in Venezuela. ‘Disastrous’: Venezuelans in South Florida react to Biden admin release of ...

  9. Le cose che non mi aspetto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Le_cose_che_non_mi_aspetto

    Cover of the Spanish version of the song, featuring Carlos Baute " Le cose che non mi aspetto " (English: The things that I don't expect ) is a song recorded by Italian singer Laura Pausini and produced by Paolo Carta, released in May 2012 as the fifth single from Pausini's 2011 studio album Inedito .