The fifth day of May......
May 5th Cinco(five in spanish) de(the in spanish) Mayo(May in spanish)
Cinco de Mayo is Spanish for the 5th of May, and that is when it is celebrated.
No, but close. It should be: veinte cinco y media
dos treinta y cinco (try using google translate it will work!)
The Spanish word "cinco" translated into English would be "five" or fifth . Thus, for example cinco de Mayo - would translate out to be 'The fifth of may" .
"2 menos cuarto/quince" or "Una y cuarenta y cinco/una con cuarenta y cinco."
Google translate says it's "siete cuarenta y cinco"
Cinco de Mayo (Spanish for "fifth of May") is a celebration held on May 5
The translation would be "Felíz Cinco de Mayo." Note that Cinco de Mayo is celebrated much more in the US than in Mexico!
Cinco dólares is a literal Spanish equivalent of the English phrase "five dollars." Billete de cinco dólaresserves as the equivalent if the reference is to the actual $25-dollar bill. The pronunciation will be "SEEN-ko DO-la-reyss" in Barcelona, Catalunya, and in Uruguayan Spanish.
Cinco De Mayo is celebrated on May 5th in the spanish speaking countries such as; Mexico, El Salvador, Costa Rica and sometimes in Guatemala
They don't. It is a Mexican and Mexican-American celebration. See related questions.