"He calls me Jaclyn!" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase ¡Me llama Jaclyn! The declaration also translates literally as "She calls me Jaclyn!" or "(formal) You call me Jaclyn!" in English. The pronunciation will be "mey SHA-ma HAK-leen" in Uruguayan Spanish.
¿Quién llama?
¿Cómo se llama la muchacha? in Spanish is "What is the girl's name?" in English.
It can be translated to english as followed. How do you call father ?
Flame in Spanish is 'llama' (pronounced yah-mah).
Lama is an Italian equivalent of the Spanish word (and Spanish loan word in English) llama. The pronunciation of the word -- which may be preceded by the masculine singular definite (il, "the") or indefinite (un, "a, one") articles -- will be "LA-ma" in Italian.
Llama is 'rama' in Japanese, written: ラマ
mi llama means my name is in spanish :) Literally "me llama" would be "he/she calles me". "Me llamo" means "I call myself", but is translated as "my name is".
"Llama, quiero verte" is Spanish for "call me, I want to see you."
LLAMA IS STILL LLAMA IN SPANISH!!!
Usually translated as "what is your name". Literally, "how do you call yourself."
The sentence "La muchacha se llama" translates to "The girl is called" in English.
"llama", and you spelled it wrong in english! :). Pronounced "yama"