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'Tu nombre' means 'your name.' Remember that 'tu' is often used as 'your' for someone with whom you are familiar or friendly; to ask for someone's name who you do not know well or you wish you to accord respect, it is often better to say 'su nombre' for usted. Be careful! While 'nombre' sounds like the English word 'number,' it is not a cognate - so it does not mean the same thing in English. 'Nombre' is 'name' while 'número' is 'number.'
mi nombre means my name. saves sounds out of place. It looks like when you wrote emanuel you meant "es manuel" being that the question would be "mi nombre es Manuel." This means My name is Manuel. What you wrote "mi nombre emanuel saves," I take it to mean My name Emanuel saves. Being that Emanuel is another name for god in christian religion. It means, "My name is Manuel, do you know spanish?"
George Clooney
Yes, "smacked" and "whacked" are examples of onomatopoeia because they imitate the sounds associated with hitting or striking something. Onomatopoeia is a figure of speech where words are used to imitate natural sounds.
No evidence supports this that I can find but you're so right because he looks and sounds exactly like him.
It sounds like an idiom to me. Metaphor. (Because man cannot literally be "a piece of work"... that refers to cloth).
Onomatopoeia
It sounds like a Saves the Day song, but i cant figure out which one.
Curious George - 2006 School of Dance Curious George Sounds Off 6-4 was released on: USA: 20 February 2012
sounds like him
Sounds like a Cube
Sounds more like a translation.