doesn't make much sense to me.i can give a word by word translation:" that i and hen" or "that i and chicken".
In English: "What do I not understand?" However, qué must have an accent (´) over the e
'What does what?' = 'Que hace que?' (with accents on the 'e' in 'que')
There is no such translation. E que will translate as E l - which makes not sence to the English language. This is because E or/and Que are the starts of sentences, they sort of are the Portuguese version of our What, Who, the ect. You would'nt find them together.
Yo te he llamado y escrito; y tu nada. Pense que te olvidaste de mi.
do you like doing/making....What do you like doing (If there is an accent over the 'e' in 'que')
Ii. yoi pronounced yo-e
It means, "We're going to get married, you and I."
It's a bit ungrammatical, so not completely clear, but: 'se que' = 'I know what' (Though 'se' should have an accent on the 'e') 'you quiere' could be Spanglish for 'usted quiere' = 'you want/love' OR 'yo quiero' = 'I wantlove' 'porque yo quiero' = 'because I want/love' 'que' (should probably be 'aquella', otherwise it doesn't make sense) = 'that' 'chica' = 'girl'. Which yields: 'I know what I/you want/love because I want/love that girl'.
"Tener" means "to have". You can conjugate it in many forms. Present tense: I have = Yo tengo You have = Tu tienes (with an accent over the u) He, She has = El tiene(with an accent over the e in El) and Ella tiene And so on. :]
It means, "We're gonna get married, you and I."
It depends if there is an accent on the e of "que" or not...If there is, then it means "How macho!"If there isn't, then it means "That man!"
Qué means what. Que without the accent on the 'e' can mean "to" or "that". Tienes is the present tense "you" form of the verb tener, which means to have. Escribir is to write. ¿Qué tienes que escribir? means "What do you have to write?"