Not quite.
Good day ususally refers to a wish that I person gretting you might have for you to have a whole good day.
Good mornig usually implies that someone is gretting and hopes that you had a restful night and now you are ready to begining your day with a Good morning, therefore it is Buenos dias.
I had the same question and when I looked it up it said that it meant good morning.
Look: "Bom dia!" in Portuguese means "Good morning!"; "Buenos días!" or "Buen día" (this latter being less used) is Spanish, having the same meaning; now "Bos dias!" is in Galician and means the same.
Good Morning although in more modern times, the younger generation of Japanese also use the shortened "Oha" to mean the same thing.
Translated to: "I don't know morning", but in Spanish it's important to put a "~" over the first n in "mañana". The ~ makes "mañana" sound like "Man-yan-a". And an accent over the e in "sé". "Se" (without accent) would mean "itself". That doesn't mean "I don't know morning"... it means "I don't know tomorrow", or "I don't know about tomorrow", or "I don't know what tomorrow brings". They all mean the same thing. "Mañana" means tomorrow , but "la manana" means "morning".
The same name can be used in Spanish.
Naked is the same in Spanish as it is in English.
It is the same: Good Day. "Buenos Dias" means, literally, good days.
Ballet in Spanish is actually the same "Ballet"
It means the same thing in Spanish.
Lawrence translates to "Lorenzo" in Spanish.
Oh, dude, Puerto Ricans say "Buenos días" for good morning. It's like Spanish, but with a tropical twist. So, if you ever find yourself in Puerto Rico, just casually drop a "Buenos días" and blend in like a pro.
in means artifact. artifact is the same in English and spanish