I attend
Asisto is a form of the spanish verb asistir (to attend).Asisto is the yo form of the verb, therefore the translation of asisto is I attend.
I attend school in spanish could be "yo asisto a la escuela" or "yo asisto al colegio"
(Yo) ayudo/asisto
I attend/go to the Spanish class.
Yo, no or no yo could mean "Not me" or "I haven't/I didn't"
i no
The word yo in Spanish refers to I, meaning me. When conjugated, yo becomes ver.
"Yo llego" in Spanish translates to "I arrive" in English.
"Yo Soy..."
"Yo savia" is not correct Spanish. It seems to be a misspelling of "yo sabía," which translates to "I knew" in English.
Spanish «Yo mido», meaning «I measure».Han
Moi non is a French equivalent of the Spanish phrase Yo no.Specifically, the French personal pronoun moi and the Spanish yo mean "I." The French adverb non and the Spanish no mean "not." The pronunciation will be "mwah noh" in French.