Perhaps you mean "Hey, contesta quién eres." That's Spanish for "Hey, answer who you are."
"Ey contesta quiénes" is Spanish for "Hey, answer who".
It means "He answers" in English.
"ey que basaser" doesn't seem to have a standard meaning in Spanish. It may be a misspelling or a colloquial expression specific to a certain region or dialect.
Some examples of words that end with "ey" and sound like "ay" are ballet, convey, and survey.
uh-pree-SHEE-ey-shun . Or some may say uh-pree-SEE-ey-shun . But for me, I say SHEE .
Some Tagalog words with "ey" include "pulley" (pole), "swey" (sweat), "tseyder" (cider), and "tsokolatey" (chocolatey).
It means "Answer the following questions in spanish."
contesta = answer en espanol = in Spanish
It means "He answers" in English.
The student answers well
No sabe no contesta - 2002 is rated/received certificates of: Argentina:13
your moma
It is the instruction to, "Answer in English."
Ey has no meanining in modern Hebrew. In Biblical Hebrew and Aramaic, it means "where" (Genesis 4:9).
Perhaps you mean "hay". (The "h" is silent). This means "there is" or there are'"
"You challenge singing and win" is one English equivalent of the Italian phrase Contesta canto e picchia.Specifically, the verb contesta is "(he/it/one/she) challenges, does challenge, is challenging, (formal singular you) are challenging, challenge, do challenge". The masculine noun canto means "poem, singing, song". The conjunction emeans "and". The verb picchia means "(he/it/one/she) beats back/down, does beat back/down, is beating back/down, (formal singular you) are beating back/down, beats back/down, do beat back/down".The pronunciation will be "kohn-THE-stah KAHN-toh ey PEEK-kyah" in Italian.
It means "... which answers the telephone" or "... who answers the telephone". As in this English translation, the original Spanish is not a complete sentence.
Please answer the question.