It's spelled wrong and you have the word "and" right in the middle of it, but it means: "and that one who was going [and] was returning"
Que es eso means 'what is that'.
"¿Qué significa eso?" It literally means, "What does that mean?"
That is what I wanted.
This is what I do.
It means "That is what you think".
It means what happens after that?
Assuming that you're asking eso para que is, it means "what is that for?.
"Eso es lo que pasa", for "that's what's happening". If you mean literally "up" as in "Upstairs" or "overhead", "Eso es lo que está arriba".
As written, it is "What that in Spanish". It is missing a verb. "¿Qué es eso en español?" would be "What is that in Spanish?"
You most likely mean,< ¿Qué diablos es eso?>, which means "What the hell is that?"Diablo literally means "devil."
It means 'What is that?' There are three ways to say 'that' in Spanish: ese, esa, and eso. Ese is used for nouns of male gender (eso libro - that book); esa is used for nouns of female gender (esa manzana - that apple); eso is used on its own when what eso/that IS has already been determined or implied. For instance, you would not say '¿Que es eso libro?' to ask 'What is that book?' You would either say '¿Que es eso?' or '¿Que es ese libro?'
What a sweet life it really is.