Something like: "your mom's car"
Hope it helps!
If you mean "hecho en carro de mi madre," it would be "made (or done) in my mother's car."
Jean de Carro died in 1857.
Jean de Carro was born in 1770.
De quem era aquele carro? = "Whose car was that?"
The English title is 'The Haywain'. It was painted in 1821.
It's a mixture of (Spanish) 'Haciendo este' = 'Doing/making this' (English) 'Spanish' and (Spanish) 'de que color es esta carro' = 'What colour is this carriage/cart?'
Funerals of the big mama
¿Quién eres? Soy la mama de... It means, "Who are you? I'm the mama [mother] of..." After the 'de', you'd expect to see the name of a child.
It means besides i.e. "Además de eso, tengo un carro." "Besides that i have a car."
"Beautiful car" is an English equivalent of "bonito carro."The masculine adjective "bonito" may be translated as "beautiful." The masculine noun "carro" means "car." Its singular definite article is "o" ("the"), and its singular indefinite article is "um" ("a, one").The pronunciation is "boo-NEE-too KAH-hoo" according to the continental accent of Portugal and the carioca accent of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Yo, mama mia
== == Coche de carreras or automobil de carreras.