"What is today's date?" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase ¿Cuál es la fecha de hoy? The question translates literally as "What is the date of today?" in English. The pronunciation will be "kwa-les la FEY-tcha they oy" in Uruguayan Spanish.
Except for the accent in "cuál", it is. It means "What is the date today".
"¿Cuál es la fecha de hoy?" translates to "What is today's date?" in English.
That not really something intelligent to say; it means "in / up your *ss".
un cul-de-sac (literallly "bag's end") is a dead end street or situation in French.
look who you trust to...
If you mean donkey, then it is baude. If you mean the coarse meaning, then it is cul.
embrasse mon cul - but that's not quite smart to say.
"The bottom is covered!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Le cul est couvert! The declaration may refer to an object's bottom or to a person's posterior. The pronunciation will be "luh kyoo-ley koo-ver" in French.
it seems to me that it is Spanish - it sounds Spanish but im not sure It is a French saying meaning 'dead end'.
- Et voila - Cul de sac - Bon appetit - Deja vu - ...
That not really something intelligent to say; it means "in / up your *ss".
well i cannot seem to find the exact answer, as you may have miss heard the cul? Cul es la cosa means the is the thing. hope this helps, pretty-zebra xxx ----------------- I think he meant qual which I believe means "which" so "which thing?" ....joecity
In French it means "bottom of the sack" and a cul-de-sacis a road or street with a dead end, and only one way in or out.
The correct spelling of cul de sac in French is "cul-de-sac."
wgere is the fushion fall cul-de-sack? wgere is the fushion fall cul-de-sack? wgere is the fushion fall cul-de-sack? wgere is the fushion fall cul-de-sack? wgere is the fushion fall cul-de-sack?
Cul Cullen died on December 7, 1982.
the bottom (body part) It also means more roughly , by a slip of language, the female genitalia.
Cul Cullen's birth name is Fred Cullen.
The word "cul" in cul-de-sac comes from the Latin word "culus," which means "bottom" or "rear." In this context, it refers to the dead-end or closed nature of a cul-de-sac street.