"Tu/su casa es muy grande ahora" (informal/formal)
They are very large in numbers now days. They outnumber every black gang now
Cortes.
Ahora means 'now' in Spanish. You use it for something that is happening right this moment or something that will be happening very soon or 'in a minute.'
Bam Margera lives in "Castle Bam", a large house in Wawaset, Pensylvania.
That's Spanish for "I am very tired now". Since "tired" is in feminine, that means it is a woman who is talking.
NO large cats live in Australia, maybe some feral house cats. But no large cats. Note: The now-extinxt Tasmanian tiger (Thylacine) was not a tiger, but a marsupial.
for grandmother in spanish you say "abuela", the diminutive form is "abuelita", wich is very common, greatgrandmother is tatarabuela. Now for grandfather in spanish you say "abuelo" or "abuelito", and great granfather is "tatarabuelo".
You can say "Te quiero mucho y llámame ahora".
The word 'now' in Spanish is 'ahora', which is pronounced ah-or-ah. If you are trying to say 'What now?' in Spanish, you would say '? Y que ahora?'
The white house (haha) but now he lives somewhere in Texas yah haha very funny now he lives in austin tx,
In Spain, the version of Spanish most widely used is Castilian Spanish. Why? Because before the 15th century there was a Castile expansion (now north Spain) and as the expansion continued they began to adopt bits and pieces of other romance languages and had a very large readjustment of their consonants that followed into the 15th century and thus gave birth to Modern Spanish.
The White House (haha) but now he lives somewhere in Texas yah haha very funny now he lives in austin tx,