Perezosa and its synonym, flojo, mean lazy.
"perezosa" is a Spanish word that translates to "lazy" in English. It is used to describe someone who lacks motivation or energy to do any tasks or work.
"tortuga perezosa"
(Yo) soy perezoso! ('perezosa' for females)
The cast of La tortuga perezosa - 1963 includes: Manuel Galiana Emilio Laguna as Various Characters (1963-1965)
Lazy in spanish is perezoso for a male and perezosa for a female.
Ella es perezosa. Ella es floja.
It's Spanish for "I hate lazy people."
It doesn't have a definition or translation. woman = mujer Did you mean 'last' = ultima? 'tasty' = sabrosa? 'lazy' = perezosa? 'lusty' = lujuriosa?
Perezoso can either mean sloth (the animal) or lazy (a person).
I'm lazy but sometimes I'm hard working. If you're a chick, you have to change it to: Soy Perezosa pero a veces soy trabajadora. And if you're a dude, you leave it like that
-ing is not usual at the end of Spanish words. The Spanish word for 'thing' is 'cosa', with which e.g 'hermosa' (feminine form of 'beautiful') rhymes, also 'famosa' (feminine 'famous'), 'prosa' (prose), 'perezosa' (feminine 'lazy'), etc.
Anabel Mateo has: Performed in "Manos a la obra" in 1997. Played herself in "Casting" in 1998. Performed in "A las once en casa" in 1998. Played Actriz perezosa in "Agujetas en el alma" in 1998. Played Secretaria in "Manos de seda" in 1999. Played Loca 6 in "El invierno de las anjanas" in 2000.
Male singular adjectives would end in "o" or "e." ex: alto (tall), serio (serious), gracioso (funny), atrevido (daring) Female singular adjectives would end in "a." ex: baja (short), perezosa (lazy), talentosa (talented), estudiosa (studious) I believe for plural you just add an "s" to those suffixes but I'm not 100% sure.