Green water is an English equivalent of 'verde agua'. The adjective 'verde' means 'green'. The feminine noun 'agua' means 'water'. Together, they're pronounced 'behr-theh AH-gwah'.
But it isn't the usual order in which the phrase is said in Spanish. Typically, 'green water' is said 'aguaverde'. It's pronounced 'AH-gwah-VEHR-theh'.
In Spanish verde claro means light green in English
This Spanish phrase translates to "a green tree" in the English language.
Agua fria = "cold water"
Palo Verde is Spanish for "green stick"
It means "The skirt is green".
The term aqua is Italian for water, agua is the spanish term for water, and Verde means green in spanish, so I surmise that it means green water
Verde is the Spanish term for "green".
Verde agua
(el) agua
In Spanish verde claro means light green in English
agua= water aleman =German in Spanish Amor= love a =to
Ture water in Spanish is agua
verde.
El agua es de color verde o azul.
In English, that would be 'aqua' . . . in Spanish, that would be 'agua'.
"Water" is an English equivalent of "agua."Specifically, the Spanish word is a feminine noun. But it takes the masculine singular definite article "el" ("the") in the singular. One reason lies in the reluctance to follow the ending vowel "a" of the feminine singular definite article "la" with the beginning vowel "a" of "agua." The feminine definite plural article "las" is used with the plural "aguas" ("waters").The pronunciation is "AH-gwah."
Agua Mala is the slang term used for Portuguese Man o' War, a sea creature. Agua Mala would translate to (if not refering to the slang term) bad water.