No. I know of no word "qui" in Spanish. Que can mean several things, dependng on context, and whether it has an accent. Generally, que means: which; than; as; that; who; whom. Qué generally means: What? or which? as an interrogative.
It means: if I am the one that searches for "qui" I am. (Qui is not a spanish word).
Que linda = What a cutie/an attractive woman/girl
"qui est-ce qui ..." or "qu'est-ce que..." are correct in French. - qui est-ce qui a pris la monnaie ? (who did take the spare change?) - qu'est-ce que c'est ? (what is it?) (extremely frequent) "Qui est-ce que ..." may be correct, but quite rare (ex: qui est-ce que voilà ?)
qui est-ce que t'appelles ? qui est-ce que vous appelez ?
In french, who is translates to qui est.
You mean spell or translate ? It can be translate by : "quelqu'un", "personne", "qui que ce soit", "n'importe qui." In french anyone is exactly the same as anybody, someone...
Qui is the French word for "who?"It is also used to mean "that, which" when it is the subject of the clause (if it is not the subject, "que" is used). For example, "Fais attention aux choses qui comptent." = "Pay attention to the things that count." BUT "C'est le livre que j'ai lu hier." = "That's the book that I read yesterday."
"ce qui sera sera" or "que sera sera" "sera" is the 3rd person future tense of to be, "he/she/it will be" and the subject is "what" which is "ce qui" or "que"
Qu'est ce que ... means 'what is ... / what does ..." in English. That is used to form questions: qu'est que c'est ? (what is that?) - qu'est-ce que tu fais ? (what are you doing?) quoi means 'what' and qui means 'who'. These words are used in French in the same way than you use their English equivalents. Ex: Je ne sais pas quoi faire > I don't know what to do; C'est elle qui a cassé le verre > It was she who broke the glass.
"Que hay de nuevo" or "Que has hecho" or "En que has estado"Will should get the same answer for each question.
Qui. Etou
Qui est que votre image