"Ado" is the ending for forming the past participle of "ar" verbs. The ending for "er" and "ir" verbs is "ido". Examples: hablar - hablado. pedir - pedido. haber - habido.
estoy cansado means "i am tired" in spanish
In Spanish, the ending -ado or -ido indicates that the word is an adjective. a breakdown of this word would be: "in" = not "communic" = communicated "ado" = adjective so a message that is "incommunicado" is an uncommunicated message.
'un ado' is 'a teen' in French. 'Ado' is a short for 'un adolescent' (teenager).
Well ado how will I know I mean it is your opinion.
No, ado means bustling excitement, fuss, or trouble. Expl: She left the room without further ado. Or Without further ado, he grabbed the microphone and began to sing.
bien preparado/educado/ensen~ado
"No wander" does not mean anything in Spanish. At best it is a bastardized form of the English command "Do not wander".
aditity definition observe
In Spanish, a form of the word "disimular" - feign, dissemble.In Spanish, a form of the word "disimular" - feign, dissemble.In Spanish, a form of the word "disimular" - feign, dissemble.In Spanish, a form of the word "disimular" - feign, dissemble.
Actually, I want to rephrase this question. What is the meaning of the "ado" suffix? Does it mean something in Spanish? There are several locations that seem to have this ending. Colorado -- means colored red. Eldorado -- City of gold. Silverado -- I can guess, but the pattern doesn't seem to fit. I would think that Colorado could be broken into two parts "color" and "ado". The most likely meaning of those two respective parts is "color" and "red". Which would make "eldor" + "ado" = gold + red. And likewise, "silver" + "ado" = silver + red. The other theory would be that "color" = red and "ado" = colored. I think this is unlikely, but this pattern logic kinda fits. Then "eldor" + "ado" = gold colored (if eldor actually means gold) and "silver" + "ado" = silver colored. I hope this makes sense. Thanks for any help. __________________________________________ Just improvind the answer: The suffix "ado" in Spanish is the same of "ed" in English. in the past participle of "to colo" "colored", in spanish the past participle of "color" is "Colorado" "dorar" means "to gild"; "dorado" means "gilded" "El" means "The" => "El dorado" means "the gilded" "Silverado" is a 2 languages mixed word that resembles "El dorado", refering to the ore of silver instead of gold. The spanish word to cover of silver is "Plateado"
Fea is the feminine singular form of the Spanish word for ugly
That is the feminine form of the color "pink".