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Mosquito comes ultimately from the Latin word for 'fly', musca (this went back to an Indo-European base *mu-, probably imitative of the sound of humming, which also produced English midge (OE), and hence its derivative midget(19th c.) -- originally a 'tiny sand-fly'). Musca became Spanish mosca, whose diminutive form reached English as mosquito -- etymologically a 'small fly'. (The Italian descendant of musca, incidentally, is also mosca, and its diminutive, moschetto, was applied with black humour to the 'bolt of a crossbow'. From it English gets musket (16th c.).).See also midge, midget, musket

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13y ago
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7y ago

Mosquito is the same in Spanish as it is in English.
same MOSQUITO!!!!

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Wiki User

13y ago

Yes. "Mosca" is the Spanish word for "fly". The diminutive form of this is "mosquito", or "little fly".

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Wiki User

11y ago

mosquito is the same in english and spanish

  • hay un mosquito!!
  • there is a mosquito!!
  • thanks hope that helped :P
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Wiki User

7y ago

Mosquito in English is mosquito in Spanish. Mosquito is a loanword to English from Spanish. In Spanish "mosquito" literally means "little fly".

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Q: Is the word mosquito of Spanish origin?
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