Soy el único hablando inglés aquí.
In Spanish you say, destinado Here is a very helpful website, where you can translate words from English to Spanish, or Spanish to English. Here is then name of it, SpanishDict.com
Here is great free online Spanish to English translator that will translate any Spanish text to English or English text to Spanish. You can even convert the translated text into speech. http://www.acreativedesktop.com/free-online-english-spanish-text-to-speech-translator.html
Roughly 3-5% of the population of Brazil speak Spanish fluently, primarily in border regions with Spanish-speaking countries such as Argentina and Uruguay. The majority of Brazilians speak Portuguese as their first language.
Voici means here is in English.
"It is spelled" = "Se escribe... (letters here)"
It depends on what part of the English speaking world you're talking about, but here are 3 examples: Sombrero Siesta Piñata
Italian - venire qui English- Come here
we are here. More generally, it is from estar, "to be", in the third person singular. It is commonly used for speaking of position, so with no other information, it could mean we are here. More commonly that would be estamos aqui.
ask a specific question regarding a spanish phrase, and someone will be able to help you here. There are plenty of people on Wikianswers that speak Spanish. that means: has una pregunta especifica relacionada a una frase en español, y alguien te podra ayudar aqui. Hay muchas personas en Wikianswers que hablan español :P
beng or said like bang. or beng aqui. <><><> Venga acqui- spoken as vin-gah ah-kee.
the Lord is here = Hashem po (ה׳ פה)
"I'm asking heaven to forgive you since I cannot!" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase ¡Le pido al cielo que te perdone pues yo no puedo! The declaration models a structural difference whereby Spanish gives the indirect pronoun, le("to it") here, which does not translate into English, along with the noun, al cielo ("to the heaven") here, which does translate into English. The pronunciation will be "ley PEA-tho al SYEH-lo key te per-DO-ney pwes yo no PWEY-tho" in Uruguayan Spanish.