"In the kitchen" is an English equivalent of "Na cozinha."
The word "na" combines the preposition "em" with the feminine definite singular article "a" to mean "to, in, at the." The feminine noun "cozinha" means "kitchen."
The pronunciation is "nah koo-ZEE-nyuh."
then we speak portuguese instead of English
voce sabe portuguesThe Portuguese translation for the English word renditionis rendição.
The Portugues word Bate-papo translated into English means "chat or talk". The origins of the word are unknown and the word is an official part of the Portuguese language.
The word bread in English translates to the word pão in Portuguese. This food item is also a staple in their diet.
No. They are from Germany, although vocalist Natalie Horler's parents are English.
"Na cozinha" is a Portuguese equivalent of "in the kitchen."The word "na" combines the preposition "em" with the feminine definite singular article "a" to mean "to, in, at the." The feminine noun "cozinha" means "kitchen."The pronunciation is "nah koo-ZEE-nyuh."
"Kitchen" is an English equivalent of "cozinha."The Portuguese word is a feminine noun. Its singular definite article is "a" ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is "uma" ("a, one").The pronunciation is "koo-ZEE-nyuh."
"Ship" is an English equivalent of the Portuguese masculine singular noun navio. The pronunciation will be "NA-vyoo" in Carioca Brazilian and continental Portuguese.
"Boa cozinha" is a Portuguese equivalent of "nice kitchen."The feminine noun "cozinha" means "kitchen." Its singular definite article is "a" ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is "uma" ("a, one"). The feminine adjective "boa" means "beautiful."The pronunciation is "BOH-uh koo-ZEE-nyuh."
It's Portuguese for: OX IS IN LINE
Cristiana Couto has written: 'Arte de cozinha' -- subject(s): Portuguese influences, Civilization, Cooking, History
It isn't Spanish. Try Portuguese.
Mais sorta na próxima! is a literal Portuguese equivalent of the English phrase "Better luck next time!" The phrase translates literally as "More luck in the next!" in English. The pronunciation will be "meysh SORTCH na PRAW-see-muh" in Cariocan Brazilian.
"Who?" in English is Quem? in Portuguese.
"He (it, one, she) swims" or "You swim" as a verb and "nothing" as a noun are English equivalents of the Portuguese and Spanish word nada. Context makes clear which option suits, with Spanish having an additional use of ¡Nada! as the second person singular imperative meaning "Swim!" The respective pronunciations will be "NA-duh" in Cariocan and continental Portuguese and "NA-tha" in Spanish.
German: Küche Portuguese: cozinha Spanish: cocina French: cuisine Welsh: cegin
Cozinha