De dos a diez millas.
In spanish, you need to say all the number. You can't divide in two pieces the number when you are talking about years like in english. For this reason, you have to say this number like thousand nine hundred ten, in spanish mil novecientos diez (1910)
Translation: Son las dos y diez.(The community answer is a literal translation which is closer in meaning to "There are ten [coming] after two.")
Dos millas is a Spanish equivalent of the English phrase "two miles." Context makes clear whether the distance is in nautical or terrestrial miles. The pronunciation will be "do-SMEESH-shas" in Uruguayan Spanish.
As a value, it is two hundred fifteen ten-thousandths. You could say "point zero two one five" as a number, not as an adjective/determiner.
dos
Dos guisantes en una vaina is how you say two peas in a pod in Spanish.
Two ten-thousandths.
There is two ways to say orange in Spanish, the meanings are different though. Naranja is Spanish for the kind of orange you eat and anaranjado is Spanish for the color orange.
Either twenty ten or two thousand and ten.
Four thousand, two hundred ten miles.
The number two hundred and ten is "doscientos diez."
Two hundred ten thousand.