As written, it is "What that in Spanish". It is missing a verb. "¿Qué es eso en español?" would be "What is that in Spanish?"
Que es eso means 'what is that'.
It means 'What is that?' There are three ways to say 'that' in Spanish: ese, esa, and eso. Ese is used for nouns of male gender (eso libro - that book); esa is used for nouns of female gender (esa manzana - that apple); eso is used on its own when what eso/that IS has already been determined or implied. For instance, you would not say '¿Que es eso libro?' to ask 'What is that book?' You would either say '¿Que es eso?' or '¿Que es ese libro?'
"¿Qué significa eso?" It literally means, "What does that mean?"
"Eso es lo que pasa", for "that's what's happening". If you mean literally "up" as in "Upstairs" or "overhead", "Eso es lo que está arriba".
Eso és lo que és.
Eso es lo que tienes que decir
You could say "Eso es lo que pasa". If you literally mean "That is the direction of up", then you could say " Eso es arriba".
Eso es lo que mereces
if you mean to say it in a way that you are tryin to teach someone a lesson, then you say, "eso es lo que te pasa" but if you mean it in a literal sense, as in you are telling someone that is the outcome, then you can say, "eso es lo que te sale"
That is what I wanted.
Usually translates a "that's so". "Eso sí que es" is how you spell "socks" in English or how you say "absolutely so" in Spanish.
Es eso todo lo que sabes?