¡Ay, caramba! it's an exclamation of surprise (negative or positive), it can be translated "oh my god!"
jajaja it's just hahaha
fog
There's a storm.
Roughly: They are amazing friends that are always there for me.
No hay de qué means "You're welcome." It's like saying, "Oh, it's nothing."
It is not a full sentence but it means: there is a _____ on the wall.
'Hay' means both "there is/there are."
It means. The hay is in the barn
fog
There are questions, or there is qs
It would mean "this day there are".
That means "there is a person". Or, as a question, "Is there a person".
This means, "there are twenty-five"
There's a storm.
"Hay una chica" in Spanish means "there is a girl" in English.
"Hay tres" means "there are three" in English. It is used to indicate that there are three of something.
zacate: grass or hay. Zacatero: One who works with hay, either by cutting or selling.
It means, "Here there is love."