¿Aún te gusta? is the Spanish translation for "So you still like it"
San Diego is a Spanish name and so it is still pronounced San Diego in Spanish.
You say the exact thing so it would be Anna still. :)Though the Spanish equivalent is 'Ana'
Sounds like a question, so I would say "Me permite hablar?.
"Por que te gusta tanto el Español?" is the translation of that phase in Spanish.
You don't pronounce the 'H' in Spanish, so you just say Anna. Make sure you say 'Awe' for the 'A' It's not like the A in Hannah. I took Spanish in school and our teacher changed our names to Spanish names, so there you go.
Aubree is a name, so it would remain Aubree. Sure, there are Spanish versions of names, like John is Juan, but if your name was John and you were speaking to a Spanish-speaking person, you would still say your name was John, and not Juan. The same would go for Aubree. For example, "Me llamo Aubree" is "My name is (I call myself) Aubree". Hope this helped. Re SAYING 'Aubree' in Spanish: a Spanish-speaker would pronounce the letters given as 'OW-oo-bray-ay'. So a Spanish-speaker would pronounce in the English way, you'd need to write it as: 'Obri'.
tres cien y trienta I think it is 'trescientos treinta'. Spanish people don't use the 'y' in that place, so you say it like this.
McDonalds is a corporate name; it does not change between languages.
in spanish "aja" has different meanings, like "yeah, right" or "so?" depends on how the person is saying it
Hiena. Remember in Spanish you do not pronounce the H so it would sound like /iena/: i: like in i - gloo e: like in e - lephant n a: like in a - pple
ok so i am ecuadorian and i speak spanish so. you say "you know what it means" in spanish like this. sabes que se nifica? This is the pronunciation key sob-es ke se knee- fee- ka
Translated from English to Spanish its 'el es tan lindo. This is how you say he is, so cute in Spanish.