Heat
Wao que calor
Calor It is generating heat - está gerando calor
It literally translates to "to have heat". However, when it is used in a sentence, it describes something as "being hot". If it is 100 degrees outside, you could say, "Yo tengo calor" to say "I am hot". Or you can say "Tener calor" to describe the general outside temperature. If the dog is panting, you could say, "El perro tiene calor" to say that "The dog is hot".
sol in english is suncalor in english is hot or heat
calor [ka'loɾ]
"Tengo calor"
Hace calor
Are you hot (temperature)
You can say "Siempre hace calor."
"School of heat" is an English equivalent of "Escuela de calor."Specifically, the feminine noun "escuela" means "school." The preposition "de" means "of." The masculine noun "calor" means "heat."The pronunciation is "eh-SKWEH-lah theh kah-LOHR."
playa y calor
"Calor" is masculine, so the phrase is "mucho calor".