"Guhd beye hend-suhm" is a way to say the English phrase "Good buy, handsome!" The pronunciation sounds similar to that of the farewell, "Goodbye, handsome!" It will sound differently when pronounced by speakers other than those of the English in the United States of America.
Buon acquisto is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "good buy." The masculine singular adjective and noun represent the exact opposite of cattivo acquisto ("bad buy"). The pronunciation will be "BWO-nak-KWEE-sto" in Italian.
The phrase "comprar casa" is a phrase that has origins from Spain. When translated, the phrase "comprar casa" in Spanish means, "buy house" in English.
The phrase 'I would like to buy this' when translated to Indonesian is Saya ingin membeli ini.
The Portuguese equivalent of the English phrase 'good buy' is the following: a boa compra. The Portuguese pronunciation is the folloiwng: ah BOH-uh KOH-pruh. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'a' 'the'; 'boa' 'good'; 'compra' 'purchase'.
Compreremmo is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "We would buy".Specifically, the verb is the present conditional form of the present infinitive comprare ("to buy"). It is in the first person plural "we" (noi). The pronunciation will be "KOHM-preh-REHM-moh" in Italian.
"Nous allons acheter..." is a French equivalent of the incomplete English phrase "We're going to buy... ."Specifically, the subject pronoun "nous" means "we." The verb "allons" means "(We) are buying, buy, do buy." The infinitive "acheter" means "to buy."The pronunciation is "noo-zah-loh-za-shteh."
"Sore wo kaimasu" is a Japanese phrase and in English it means "I'll buy it."
geo thermal its the best buy now
Você quer comprar cervejas! is a Portuguese equivalent of the English phrase "You want to buy beers!" The same phrase also translates literally as "Do you want to buy beers?" when the exclamation mark is replaced by a question mark. The pronunciation will be "vo-SEY ker koom-PRAR ser-VEH-zheyesh" in Cariocan Brazilian and in continental Portuguese.
No it is a quality of something (good food) or something you do. The stuff you buy is/are called "goods" (with the "s"). This is a different English word.
"I'm buying!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase J'achète!Specifically, the personal pronoun je* means "I". The verb achète translates as "(I) am buying, buy, do buy". The pronunciation will be "zah-sheht" in French.*The vowel e drops -- and is replaced by an apostrophe -- before a verb which begins with a vowel.
"Sore wo kaitai nodesu " is a Japanese phrase and in English it means "I would like to buy ... "