It's a sentence fragment. It means, "...and quickly you're going to speak like..."
This Spanish phrase translates to "and soon you're going to speak like."
"¿Cómo vas a ir?" in English means "How are you going to go?"
"¿Cómo vas con tu marido?" translates to "How are things going with your husband?" in English.
In Cajun French, you can say "Bonjour" to greet someone.
"Que vas a hacer" in Spanish translates to "What are you going to do" in English.
"Tu vas où en ville?" means "Where are you going in the city?" in French.
"¿Cómo vas a ir?" in English means "How are you going to go?"
How are you/how's things today
very soon you will be able to see
Lets first go through what each of the words mean: bueno - well si - if te - reflexive for 'you' hablo - I talk (hablar is the infinitive of the verb) en - in espanol - spanish todo - all la - the veces - time como - how vas - you go (ir is the infinitive of the verb (irregular)) a - to intender - not a spanish word, perhaps they meant 'entender' - to understand so put that all together and you get: well, if I talk to you in spanish all the time, how will you understand?
This literally means "How is your school?" in Spanish. This form of "is" refers to identity, not condition. It's asking about the character of the school, not the current events. In English we might say, "What is your school like?" to ask the same thing.
"¿Cómo vas con tu marido?" translates to "How are things going with your husband?" in English.
You can say "Vas a tener uno (or una for a feminine object) pronto".
How are you going to find the love of your life when you look with your eyes
why are you going to be annoyedif i did nothing to you
"Tu vas voir" is a French phrase that translates to "you will see" in English. It is often used to express a sense of anticipation or warning.
Vas-tu means "are you going"
mir como estas yo bien solo te vas encima