It's warm (as in the weather)
The word 'caliente' means hot as in the temperature, while the word 'picante' means hot as in Spicy. It is hot = hace calor
"Que es caliente y frio?" Caliente = Hot Frio = Cold by adding the spanish word 'muy', before either word will make it 'very hot', or 'very cold'. Hace calor - It is hot Hace frio - It is cold
It's warm (as in the weather)
hacer means to make or do so hace is the conjugated form of that. Hace means he or she makes or he or she does. --amanda
It means: it's windy
Calor is the Latin word for "heat".
He does, she does or it does. It is also use in a sentence No se hace! No se hace means Don't do that!
Makes, make
It means: it makes my guille big. (guille is not a Spanish word, as far as I can tell). 'guillla' = plentiful harvest
Opposite word of calor
'Mas' without an accent over the a is a contradictory conjunction that means 'but.' 'Más' with the accent over the 'a' is a comparative adverb that means 'more.' For an example of the differences, this sentence "Hace calor, mas ayer hacía más" means "It's cold, but yesterday was colder." That Spanish sentence means the same as if you said "Hace calor, pero ayer hacía más."
"Calorie" is not a Latin word, though it has Latin roots: it is from the word calor, meaning "heat."