Collected normative data for 254 line drawings from the set used by J. G. Snodgrass and M. Vanderwart (see record 1981-06756-001) to be used in research with Spanish-speaking samples. 261 Spanish-speaking Ss participated in 1 of 6 tasks: name agreement, familiarity, complexity, image agreement, picture-name agreement, and image variability. Each S responded to every drawing. Results are compared to those obtained by Snodgrass and Vanderwart from English-speaking Ss. There were small but significant differences for familiarity and complexity. The English-speaking sample rated the pictures as more familiar; the Spanish Ss judged the pictures as slightly more simple. The evidence justifies the statement that normative data of cognitive stimuli cannot be taken into another language directly, because object names common in one language may not be so in another, or objects that have a specific name in one language may have a generic name in another. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2007 APA, all rights reserved)