"Verdad, si sabes un poco de español." means "True, if you know a little Spanish."
Firstly 'berdad' is spelt 'Verdad' and it means truth. ...Verdad que sabes espanol... means 'it's true/ you really do know spanish'. 'Sabes' comes from the verb saber 'to know'. Hope that helps.
You know spanish, right?
sabes que es verdad
It depends how the phrase is said. If it intends to mean "You know right" where "right" is something that you know as in the below conversation, it would be "Sabes lo razonable". Person 1: I will never whip somebody. Person 2: Clearly, you know right from wrong. If it intends to mean "You know, right", where "right" affirms that you know something in the below conversation, "Sabes, verdad". Person 1: I can't belive Marcus is dating a girl like that! Person 2: You know, right?
Si sabes espanol verdaderamente = if you really know Spanish 'verda' is not a word.
"Tu sabes que estoy deseando" in Spanish means "You know that I am longing" in English.
slightly incorrect, it means 'not if you know spanish.'
"Sabes que" is Spanish for "[you] know what".
yo se is "i know". or for short you say "se" then theres saber, saben, sabes.. tu sabes means " you know", but often the "tu" is left off and you say "sabes" for short which still means "you know".
Assuming you mean tu sabes, it means "you know"
It means "you know a little Spanish" in English.
"Ya tu sabes" means "you already know" and is often used in mostly spanish songs which means as much as "ya'll know how I do" in this context. Actually, "ya tu sabes" is getto-latino-slang meaning "now you know". A lot of Puerto Ricans, Dominicans and Cubans use this phrase.