When used as an adjective, it could mean a variety of things such as "clear," "light," "pale," or "fair." When used as an adverb, it means "clearly." Note- Sometimes it is used as an exclamation meaning "Of course!"
"Claro" means clear or obvious in Spanish. It can also mean light or bright depending on the context.
"Claro que sí" translates to "of course" or "sure" in English. It is used to affirm something or convey agreement in Spanish.
of course I want everything with you
Literal = "Clear. Here you have" The saying mere: "Sure, here you are" "Sure, here you go" "Sure, Take this."
"Claro que me gustos y te amo" is a grammatically incorrect sentence in Spanish, as it contains a combination of words that do not make sense together. "Claro" typically means "clear" or "of course," "me gustos" is incorrect grammar for expressing personal likes, and "te amo" means "I love you." It seems like a mix of different phrases.
¡Claro! ¿En qué puedo ayudarte hoy?
In Spanish verde claro means light green in English
or claro, is clear
Light blue
"Por vous claro" is gibberish. Vous means 'you' (formal or plural), the rest doesn't mean a thing.
Well to me "claro, por supuesto" means "sure, of cource". I usually don't hear "claro, por supuesto together like that, but if I had to guess I'd say that they mean "well, of course."
"Soy claro como el agua" means "I am clear like the water".
Claro que si cuando los visitas = Obviously yes when you visit them
its pues claro not poss. it means well ok, I don´t have a problem.
It means "loud and clear".
"Claro que sí" translates to "of course" or "sure" in English. It is used to affirm something or convey agreement in Spanish.
"of course we are" or "we are clear" depending on the context of the sentence.
claro- clearly, llame- call me, en- in, la-the, manana-morning, so the phrase means "Clearly, call me in the morning."