The first part, "Que pasó contigo" means "What happened with you" and is often used as a greeting, but can also be used in contexts such as if you looked like you'd been in a fight or are missing a hand, to ask what actually happened with you. The second part, "Como estás" means "How are you?" informally, and is commonly used as a greeting same as in English.
Both sentences can be used together or separately as a greeting.
"Que pasó contigo" means "What happened to you" and "¿Cómo estás?" means "How are you?" So, "¿Qué pasó contigo, cómo estás?" could be translated as "What happened to you, how are you?"
"Contigo" in Spanish means "with you."
"Contigo" means "with you" in English.
"LLévame contigo" means "take me with you" in Spanish.
"I love you not for who you are, but for who I am when I am with you."
Spanish: Que vamos hacer contigo?English: What are we going to do with you?
"Contigo" means "with you" in English.
this isn't spanish what you talkin bout
"Contigo" in Spanish means "with you."
"LLévame contigo" means "take me with you" in Spanish.
It means "with you."
It means "with you soon".
"I love you not for who you are, but for who I am when I am with you."
"Todo contigo, nada sin ti" means "Everything with you, nothing without you." It conveys the idea that the person saying it wants to do everything together with the other person and can't imagine doing anything without them.
Spanish: Que vamos hacer contigo?English: What are we going to do with you?
god is with you
"Como se llama ella" in Spanish translates to "What is her name" in English. It is a question used to ask for the name of a female person.
"Contigo" is a Spanish word. The English equivalent would be the phrase "with you," speaking to someone who is a friend or family member (informal). The phrase "Voy contigo" would translate to "I'm going with you."