(Italian) 'un abbraccio' = (Spanish) 'un abrazo' = (English) ' a hug, embrace'
'un abrazo' is pronounced 'oon ahbrAHthaw' ('th' as in 'thin')
Y un abrazo is a literal Spanish equivalent of the Italian phrase e un abbraccio. The conjunction, masculine singular indefinite article/number, and masculine singular noun translate from Italian and Spanish to English as "and a kiss" or "and one kiss." The respective pronunciations will be "ey OO-nab-BRAT-tcho" in Italian and "ee OO-na-BRAH-so" or "ee OO-na-BRAH-tho" in Spanish.
Un abbraccio alla mia amica in Italian means "a (one) hug for my (girl) friend" in English.
Hugs and big kisses
Necesito un médico is how you say i need a doctor in Spanish :)Necesito un médico is how you say i need a doctor in Spanish :)Necesito un médico is how you say i need a doctor in Spanish :)Necesito un médico is how you say i need a doctor in Spanish :)
un vínculo un enlace
obtener un
Tiene un(a)....
To say 'I have a notebook' in Spanish, you would say 'Tengo un cuaderno.'
To say 'I have a car' in Spanish, you would say 'Tengo un carro.'
To say 'I have a desk' in Spanish, you would say 'Tengo un escritorio.'
"A hug" and "one hug" are English equivalents of the masculine singular phrase un abbraccio written at the end of a text message in Italian. "(See you) soon!" is one English equivalent of the adverbial phrase a presto.
You can say "¿eres un niño?"