What are you doing love.
"Y tu amor que haces" translates to "And your love, what are you doing?" in English.
What are you doing, my love?
"Ke ases amor" appears to be a phonetic spelling of "¿Qué haces, amor?" in Spanish, which translates to "What are you doing, love?"
Que haces, mi amor (accent on first 'e')
Jaja = HahaQue haces? = What are you doing?So it mean, "Haha, what are you doing?"
The correct spelling is "Que haces" but it means what are you doing?
"¿Qué haces allí?" is Spanish for "What are you doing there?"
I think you mean to say que haces, in which case it means what are you doing. And as an extra not it uses the informal you, (yes there is also a formal you in spanish) mean you are close or you are younger.
hola que haces nada
It means "You do now"
It means "What are you doing with"...
it means "what are the days of the weekend?