Yes, like a brother.
If you have brothers or sisters or both, you say, "Sí." Then you say how many of each you have: Tengo ______ hermano/s. (for brothers) Tengo ______ hermana/s. (for sisters) Tengo ______ hermano/s y _______ hermana/s. (for both) If you are an only child, you answer, "No; no tengo hermanos."
hermano, s. masc.hermana, s. fem.
como sacar la mac de un samsung s 5330
Estoy aburrido como la mierda = I'm bored as s***.
Hermano Duval has written: 'Tecnologia & direito' -- subject(s): Technology and law
Liliana Pantano has written: 'Discapacidad Como Problema Social: Un Enfoque Sociologico' 'La discapacidad como problema social' -- subject(s): People with disabilities, Social conditions
There are a few possibilities for this. A banana can be translated as 'un plátano' or 'una banana'. In addition, I am eating can be said as 'como' or 'estoy comiendo'. One is the present indicative tense and the other is the present progressive. That said, the answer(s) to your question is: Como un plátano. Como una banana. Estoy comiendo un plátano. Estoy comiendo una banana.
That means something like "how be". If you mean "Cómo estás", that means "How are you".
As a result he/she/you end(s) up squaring a good deal
Hello lovely/darling, how do you feel? (Strictly speaking, the translation should be 'how does it feel to you?'. 'How do you feel?' would be 'como te sientes' (with 's' at the end); but I've assumed it's an accidental omission of the 's').
Santo Monti has written: 'La cattedrale di Como' -- subject(s): Buildings, structures, Duomo di Como, History 'La cattedrale di Como' -- subject(s): Buildings, structures, Duomo di Como, History 'Storia ed arte nella provincia ed antica Diocesi de Como' -- subject(s): Art, History
"Vive en un país" means "He/she/you live(s) in a country" in English.