There is very little left.
he is a person that eats little
Muy loco would translate to very crazy in English.
I speak it VERY well. I can talk it, i can type it. ANYTHING.
sordos
it means "TIME" or "weather", depending on the context. we have very little time - tenemos muy poco tiempo bad weather - mal tiempo
Poco a poco means gradually.
C deaf
is not a very well written phrase, is like a computer translation from another language, but it roughly means: "it's not a very beautiful lady"
well if you want to say "i speak a bit of spanish, but not much " you say " Hablo un poco espanol , pero no mucho " or to answer your question : muy poco espanol but that isnt really a sentence or does it make that much sense so if you want to get the point across that you dont speak that much spanish , i would use the first spanish sentence but if you want to sound really foreign to a spanish person say "muy poco espanol" but hahaha they will laugh at you so i rather not if i were you
Hablo muy poco español is a Spanish equivalent of 'I speak very little Spanish'. The verb 'hablo' means '[I] am speaking, do speak, speak'. The adverb 'muy' means 'very'. The adverb 'poco' means 'little'. The adjective/noun 'español' means 'Spanish'. All together, they're pronounced 'AH-bloh mwee POH-koh eh-spah-NYOHL'.hablo muy poco espanol
como registrar un negosio
nothing = nada nothing much = muy poco (literally: very little) in you = en ti