"I'm very hungry" is usually translated as, "Tengo mucha hambre," which literally means, "I have much hunger." It can also be said, "Estoy muy hambriento/a."
In Spanish, you don't say "I am hungry", but rather "I have hunger". So the phrase would be "Abuela, tengo hambre".
Tengo hambre.tengo hambre
"Perro hambriento"
I am hungry, very hungry(though the sentence isn't grammatically correct. It should be 'Tengo hambre, mucho hambre.' In Spanish, you literally "have hunger.")
¡Que vengan con hambre!
Tengo mucha hambre
"Yo también tengo hambre"
Only if you are making a statement such as "I have hungry children" "Tengo niños que padecen hambre" If you are telling someone you are hungry, you can say "I am hungry" "Tengo hambre" or asking "are you hungry" to someone else say "tienes hambre?"
Hambre is Spanish for hungry.Hambre is actually Spanish for "hunger". To say I am hungry, you would say Tengo hambre which literally means "I have hunger".Tener hambre is the phrase you'd conjugate to apply to other people.hombre
To answer the question: ¿Tienes hambre ahora? you would say either: Sí, tengo hambre ahora. OR No, no tengo hambre ahora.
No muy buena is the best way to say "not very good" in Spanish.
Very similar in spanish: Mascota