"Hi cosa" is not a phrase or wording in English. -Gibberish or foreign.
little thing poquita cosa = pusillanimous person
"thing"
Usually it's spelled "Cosa", but in some cases it translates differently, e.g.What do you want?Cosa vuoi?What kind of...Che tipo di...What? as an exclamationChe cosa?
"es cosa de dos" = "it's a matter between two"
Spanish: cualquier cosa French: n'importe quoi German: irgendetwas Italian: qualsiasi cosa Japanese: 何か
"Le amo" means "I love you", and "cosa hermosa" means "beautiful thing".
Sin^2 - Cos^2 = 1 {By the Identity}Therefore (SinA-CosA)(SinA+CosA) = 1SinA-CosA = 1/(SinA+CosA)Therefore CosA-SinA = -1/(SinA+CosA)
In Spanish, "la cosa se puso caliente" means "things got heated." It is often used to describe a situation that has become intense, heated, or tense.
I think it means all of you guys get the things
buenacosa
"What does it mean...?" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Cosa significa? The question also translates as "What do you mean?" or "What does he (she) mean?" according to context. The pronunciation will be "KO-sa see-NYEE-fee-ka" in Italian.