Pues means well. As in, "Well, today we went to the river and caught some fish." Or, "Well, I really don't want to go today."
It means "well" or "so". I'm taking the Spanish class. ^^
"Well" or "so" depends on how you're using it.
dige is not a real Spanish word, and neither is ala. But if you change the sentence to Diga pues a la verga, it means: "say it, then, to the rod"
Its Spanish for ,("hurry up"/ "go ahead already")
In standard Spanish, it must be: "Pues aquí. Ya llegué a mi casa, después de ir a un evento", meaning, "here. I just arrived at home after going to a festival"
it means, we´re going, lets go etc etc but it is slang not proper spanish, it can also mean to hit some one.
Heh orale pues roughly means "haha alright then"
Pues = well
That seems to be Spanglish because of "you", not a correct form of Spanish. In standard Spanish it must be:"Pues, (tú) ya contestaste" --------- Well/because, you already answered."Pues ya (you) constestastes", seems to be Caribbean Spanish.
"Pues hablas espaΓ±ol" means "Well, you speak Spanish" in English. It is a statement acknowledging that the person being spoken to can speak Spanish.
"Pues quΓ© haces" in Spanish translates to "So what are you doing?" in English. It's a common way to ask someone what they are up to or what they are currently doing in a casual manner.
Translation: Everything can vary.
'San Francisco' IS Spanish; it means 'Saint Francis'
A non-word, or "nonce word," is a kind of Spanish word that is made up and has no meaning in the language. These are typically used for linguistic purposes, such as in experiments or to test language processing.
dige is not a real Spanish word, and neither is ala. But if you change the sentence to Diga pues a la verga, it means: "say it, then, to the rod"
Its Spanish for ,("hurry up"/ "go ahead already")
In standard Spanish, it must be: "Pues aquí. Ya llegué a mi casa, después de ir a un evento", meaning, "here. I just arrived at home after going to a festival"
Pues yo no...
You could say "Pues, aprendalo."