"I want to..."
"Quiero" translates to "I want" in English.
"Lo quiero" in Spanish translates to "I want it" in English.
"Quierro" is not a word in Spanish; it might be a typo for "quiero," which translates to "I want" in English.
"Los quiero" in Spanish means "I love them" when referring to a group of people.
"Yo también te quiero" is a Spanish phrase that translates to "I love you too" in English.
It means "if I want". Si is the Spanish word for if. Quiero is the yo form of querer, which means "to want" and yo means "I", so quiero is "I want". If it was something like sí quiero (notice the accent on the i in sí), it would be something like "yes, I want" since sí is the Spanish word for yes.
"Llama, quiero verte" is Spanish for "call me, I want to see you."
I want you - yo te quiero - this is construed in Spanish to mean ¨"I love you".
Do you mean how do you say want in Spanish? The word "want" doesn't mean anything in Spanish because it is an English word. In spanish the infinitive "to want" is querar. I want is yo quiero.
"Los quiero" in Spanish means "I love them" when referring to a group of people.
"Yo también te quiero" is a Spanish phrase that translates to "I love you too" in English.
"I love my boss" in English is Quiero a mi jefe to a male boss and Quiero a mi jefa to a female boss in Spanish.
Quiero means "I want"
te quiero
I want or I love
quiero = I want
It is spanish shorthand/slang for "Personas que quiero". Meaning in english, "People that I like".
Bascially, it means, "I'd like to get to know you better," in Spanish.