oups, je l'ai mal écrit
Most of the time, in portuguese, we use "opa" (oh-pah) when you make a mistake, or you step on someone's foot, for example.Example: "Oops! I'm sorry!" - "Opa! Me desculpe!"Or just say "oops!". We also use "oops" hahahahaCheers ;)
I'm assuming you meant to ask: "If the word...", and not: "Is the word..." There is no comma after "oops." Start a sentence with a capital letter, and place an exclamation mark after the word "oops." Also, use a comma after the word "sentence", just before the "is there..."--or second-- part of your question. Oops! I've spent more time on this than I thought I would...
It is a interjection lol
No, "oops" is not an interjection. It is an exclamation used to express surprise or regret when making a mistake or having an accident. Interjections are typically short exclamatory words or phrases that stand alone, like "oh" or "ah".
Loud is not a verb and does not have a past tense.
The same as you do in English: Oops.
Oops
I'm sure there are many ways, but I might say, oups, je me suis trompé (de salle, d'adresse, etc.) -- "oops zhuh muh sewee troh[n]-pay" It literally means, "oops, I made a mistake/ mixed things up," etc. When you add a noun at the end after de, it means, "oops, I got the wrong room/ the wrong address," etc.
oops wrong question
oops, wrong justin, sorry
oops wrong click
It is a childish rhyme that you say when something has gone wrong instead of just saying "oops."
you can never log in again
Well, personally, i, have, an, attraction, towards, minerals, and, i, have, spent, a, great, portion, of, my, life, studing, (i, think, i, spelled, that, wrong,), minerals, and, i, think, that, minerals, are, the, best, things, in, the, whole, wide, universe, and, minerals, are, the, best, things, ever, i, have, benn, studing, minrls, my, tire, life, and, i love, meneralis, oops, spelled that, wrong,, dran, mi, revy, sdyelixc, haha loser bye bye...
German: ups (pronounced oops), hoppla, huch
not luj parmaq. Oops, sorry, that was Klingon.
Just say, "oops, wrong number, sorry!"