The climate in Spain is temperate. but varied. Galicia, the northwestern area has quite a lot of rain. The mountain ranges have a fair share of snow, there are many ski resorts in Spain..
The south is generally sunny, up to 300 days a year. Inland Andalucía is hot in summer, it can go up to 42º - 44º degrees centigrade. The coast (Costa del Sol) is much more clement. When it's 42º in Seville, here in Málaga we may have a comfortable 34º with a seabreeze! The southeast, around Almería is actually a semi-desert (Many cowboy movies were filmed there because of the similarity to the far west landscape).
Currency used to be the PESETA, but since 2001, and the installation of the EURO in the EEC countries, the euro is common to all these countries including Spain.
The official language in Spain is (evidently) spanish. There are other languages in Spain. These are NOT dialects of spanish, but languages in their own right. They are:
EUSKERA... in the Basque areas (of both Spain and France)
GALLEGO... in Galicia.(northwestern Spain, this is similar to portuguese)
CATALÁ...spoken in Catalonia from the french border all the way down to Alicante on the mediterranean coast. This includes the provinces of Gerona, Lleida, Barcelona, Tarragona, Castellon de la Plana, Valencia and Alicante. Catalá DOES have different dialects, these are spoken in Valencia, Alicante, and the Balearic Islands.
There is one more called BABLE which is spoken in Asturias, this IS considered a dialect of spanish.
The rest of the country speaks spanish, often called CASTELLANO because it originated in Castile.
Great places to shop....
There is a chain of department stores with centers in most of the larger towns in Spain... It is called "EL CORTE INGLÉS".
There are also your typical shopping centers, similar to your shopping malls in the USA. They have many shops, boutiques, and usually at least one "hyper-market" (Carrefour, Alcampo, or Eroski).
As to restaurants...Spain is country of people that enjoy eating... There are cafés, bars and restaurants on almost every street. Many of them fantastic, with typical spanish cuisine. In recent years there has been an invasion of foreign restaurants, everything from french, italian, mexican, indian, chinese, and japanese, to KFC, McDonalds, Burger King and Pizza Hut! You can take your pick... The typical spanish bar or café usually has "Tapas", which are snack size portions of spanish food, everything from paella to fish, meatballs in almond sauce, cheese, serrano ham, etc (I could go on forever!) .
Internet cafés have also become very popular in Spain, you can find several in most towns.. Here they are called "Cyber-Cafés".
I think that answers all the parts of your question.
2006-10-06 08:44:48
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answer #1
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answered by abuela Nany 6
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the weather is really nice and temperate, they have completely adopted the euro, the language is many different dialects of spanish and then there is basque -- who knows where that came from. be nice and friendly and polite and the spanish will love you. don't wear shorts and flip-flops or they will hate you. they like things informal but not as informal as the united states. like the saying goes -- when in rome -- it is usually very easy to meet locals who will tell you places to go. i found it easiest to meet people during tapas -- everyone runs around snacking and drinking from about 9pm to 11pm. its kind of like a late happy hour with great food and a great time to pick brains for things to do. I strongly suggest being as mobile as possible. barcelona is nothing like bilbao and while madrid is the center of the country its also the most homogenous -- but they have the prado too! mostly have agreat time! my favorite vacation was to spain -- i need to go back
2006-10-06 06:53:19
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Most ships and immigrants crusing to the New World began from Seville, so the Spanish they carried with them used to be now not the normal Spanish of Castrle, however the dialect of Andalusia, with z mentioned as s (seseo) and ll as y (yeismo), The Spanish of the High Andes and of Central Mexico underwent little extra difference, besides in vocabulary, however there have been extra phonetic simplifications alongside the coasts and at the islands of the Caribbean (a bent to drop s earlier than a following consonant for example) and across the River Plate estuary, in which LL grew to be mentioned like a French j: pollo like podjo or pozho.
2016-08-29 06:56:47
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answer #3
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answered by rentschler 4
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