you say it there's nothing to worry about
Translation: What's up? Do you know Marilin?
At that age he's 18 or less
QUEUE, remove "UEUE", say Q
There are no pronouns in English that start with the letter q.
No English words end in Q, since Q is always followed by U.
The alphabet has 26 letters. The letter "R" comes after the letter "Q".The English alphabet, in order:ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
The acronym Q and A means "question and answer", with the Q steading for question and the A for answer. Question and Answer
There is no one word for "yes" or "no" in Chinese. The closest a general word comes to capturing "no" in Chinese is "bù" (不), but this is closer to the meaning of "not" in English. Generally the way to say "yes" or "no" in Chinese is through the following: * Repeat the verb in question to say "yes" or say "bù" (not) and then the verb. Here is an example of the format in English: Affirmative Q: "You go to store" A: "go" Negative Q: "You go to store". A: "Not go" (or "bú qù") * Repeat the adjective in question to say "yes" or say "bù" (not) and then the adjective. Here is an example of the format in English: Q: "Is he handsome?" A: "Handsome" or "Not handsome" (using bù before the adjective) You can use the same pattern for adverbs. You can also use a general response to clarify that what the speaker says is "correct" (duì) or "not correct" (bú duì). For example: Q: Are you American? A: "duì" (correct or "yes"), or búduì (not correct or "no")
'Q'
Assuming Q is que, then: what are you doing, my love?
Yes. It is 'Q', in fact, but it stands for the German word, "Quelle". In English we might say Question. This refers to the Synoptic gospels in the Christian New Testament, meaning that we aren't sure who wrote them, or in what order.