Son (or A) las ocho y(or menos) media.
La una y treinta de la tarde
La una y media de la tarde (= half-past-one, p.m.)
(Que son) las nueve de la mañana = '(It's) nine a.m.'
Son las siete y media de la manana.
son las nueve y media de la manana
Son las seis y media
Nueve y media de la mañana
dos y media
N
m
Son las tres menos doce de la tarde
Son las once (or 11 pm may be veintitres in some regions).
Answer 1a emepe emeAnswer 2Most Spaniards and Latin Americans do not use the abbreviations "AM" or "PM" to connote time when speaking and say "de la mañana" for "AM" and "de la tarde" or "de la noche" for "PM" (depending on how late it is). In terms of writing, Spanish-speakers write in "military time", so "7:00 AM" would be "7:00", but "7:00 PM" would be "19:00". Therefore, a Spanish-speaker reading "19:00" would say "siete de la noche" not "diecinueve".
if its pm then its "3 de la tarde" if its am thn its "3 de la manana"
There is no AM/PM in Spanish. Instead the phrases "de la tarde" or "de la noche" are used for times after noon. (Times in the morning are "de la mañana.")
Twelve thirty in the afternoon would be most correct. You cannot say twelve thirty o'clock. You only say o clock when you don't have any minutes over.
one and a half hours
La una de la tarde.
4:29 pm in Spanish is: Son las cuatro veintinueve de la tarde.
Three thirty-six and thirty three seconds pm
one hour and forty five minutes
It depends on which country you are referring to.
You would say "de la tarde" or "de la noche".
You say, "Son las dos de la tarde."
The time 4:30 PM is "four-thirty PM."
Llega a las 2:30 (dos treinta) PM (pe eme)
las dos menos diez or on a 24 hour clock, las catorce menos diez