he/she/it lives in a country
"Vive en un país" means "He/she/you live(s) in a country" in English.
I want to be in your country.
"La señora Sánchez vive en una casa" means "Mrs. Sanchez lives in a house" in Spanish.
"Si no está en inglés" means "if it is not in English" in English.
It translates to "I can say in which country or state each of the mentioned cities is located."
"Puedo hablar en inglés" translates to "I can speak in English" in English.
PEOPLESEARCH.COM - dice que no se alla el nombre. En que estado vive? En que pais vive?
"en que pais esta machu picchu " is Spanish for "in what country is Machu Picchu."
francia
The Spanish phrase 'vive en' means [he/she/it] lives in... . In the word-by-word translation, the verb 'vive' is the third person singular form in the present indicative tense. And the preposition 'en' means 'in'.
I want to be in your country.
Vive en mí was created in 1994.
En carne vive was created in 1954.
What block does (s)he live on?
"Él vive en" (he=él, lives=vive, in=en)
The duration of En carne vive is 1.5 hours.
"Country" se traduce al español como "país". Sin embargo, también puede referirse a "campo" o "zona rural".
vive en fancia en la ciudad de lyonAnother AnswerIn English, the phrase translates to: 'what country you live', or as a question: in which country do you live?