Señora is Spanish for Mrs. or for a woman whose married (Sra. Name (Sra. Is just like Mrs. Hope this helped ;)
"SeΓ±ora" is a term in Spanish used to address or refer to a married woman or a woman of a certain age. It is equivalent to "Mrs." in English.
"Manana your senora" is a Spanish phrase that translates to "tomorrow, madam" in English. It is often used dismissively to indicate a lack of urgency or importance.
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Agrestide refers to someone who is rustic, unpolished, or uncultured. It can also mean relating to the countryside or rural areas.
It appears that there may be a typo in your question. Did you mean to ask about "integrity"? Integrity refers to the quality of being honest and having strong moral principles.
It's not fair to generalize all grandpas as mean. Some individuals may come across as mean due to a lack of communication skills, personal struggles, or difficulties expressing emotions. It's important to try to understand where their behavior is coming from and communicate openly with them.
How's things, senora
The words ' te presento a la senora diaz' are Italian. These words translate into English as 'I present to you the Senora Diaz'.
Goodnight Mrs. or Miss.
Very well, madam
Good night mrs.
I am a hot senora
Senora should be spelled with a tilde over the n, so señora is the correct spelling.
Maybe "She isn't a lady." or maybe "She isn't married."
"cie" is not a word, if you meant "sí señora" it means "yes ma'am"
Spanish for madam, or Mrs is Senora. Spanish for sir or Mr is Senor. Just in case you needed that too.
How does Senora Rodriguez's parrot help Shirley.
La senora mandona/autoritaria (tilde, ~, on the 'n' in 'senora')