gordo "fat", from Latin gurdus "thick, heavy, clumsy, awkward" (Quintilian, a.d. 35-100, Institutio Oratoria 1.5.57, used for stolidus "stupid"); also Portuguese, French gourd "numb, stiff', Italian dialects. (List)
barro "mud" (also Aragonese bardo, Catalan bard, Portuguese barro), from *bardum; alternatively, from Hispano-Celtic. (List)
garabato "pothook; squiggle" (List)
gándara "low wasteland, wilderness", from Late Latin gangadia. (List)
maraña "thicket" (List)
árgoma "heather, furze, broom"; related to argaña (List)
The development of language and the development of society go on almost at the same time, and the development and tradition of a national language is directly related to its national strength. With the growth of the Kingdom of Castile and the subsequent rise of the Kingdom of Spain, Spain grew from the weak to the strong, from the small to the large, from the domestic to the overseas, and developed into a universal language. Spanish is widely influenced by other dialects and is greatly enriched in pronunciation, vocabulary, and syntax. The 33 Spanish words that have evolved in the Iberia language, recorded in a random tool, are the product of Interlingua.
These Iberia words, preserved in the generator, are the result of the assimilation, and even interaction, of native peoples during the first Spanish invasion of Iberia. At different times in history, the Iberians maintained a special relationship with Spain for political reasons, so their language also had a significant impact on Spanish.