you want one like this one
¿Quieres uno? - informal ¿Usted quiere uno? - formal
¿Cómo tú quieres uno?
'uno (minus, really 'menos' in Spanish) uno' = 'one minus one'
uno means one (1). It can also mean the indefinite article "a" or "an".
Por donde uno (alguien) va... (En este caso, el pronombre "uno" se refiere a una persona desconocida) The question's a bit ambiguous. If you mean, 'How do you say "Where are you going?"' - "¿Adónde va usted/vas?" If you mean 'How do you say, e.g. "(Someone) is going to...."', then "(X) va a ....." ('María va a Madrid', 'José va a la escuela', for example)
Uno minuto mas -One minute more
In Uno Flip, the cards come in two colors: light and dark.
I'm not sure if it's an idiomatic expression or something but I think it translates out to "That wardrobe/closet is more expensive than this one." I hope that helps but don't take my word for it.
One and are (?)
One for all. All for one
The word "uno" in Spanish means "one" in English.
Numeral uno means number one in Spanish. It also means roman numeral one in Spanish which is "I". Edit: "numeral uno" actually means "numeral one". But you probably meant to write "número uno" which means "number one". It does not mean roman numeral one.