"My beautiful niece! Hallelujah!" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase ¡Mi bella sobrina! ¡Aleluya! The feminine/masculine singular possessive, feminine singular adjective and noun, and exclamation may be used to express an aunt's or uncle's joy over infrequent visits or relief over safe arrival. The pronunciation will be "mee VEY-sha so-BREE-na" in Uruguayan Spanish, "mee VEY-zha so-BREE-na" in Argentine Spanish, and "mee VEY-ya so-BREE-na A-ley-LOO-ya" in Spanish elsewhere.
Sobrina or if you wish to say My Niece it's "Mi Sobrina"It is "sobrina". Nephew is "sobrino".
"¿Qué es mi sobrina?" means "What is my niece?" as a question; or '...who is my niece' as a subordinate clause, as in 'Maria, who is my niece'
in spanish niece is sobrina
Spanish for "neice"
sobrina favorita
Mis hermanas
niece = sobrina
¡Muchas gracias, mi sobrina! is a literal Spanish equivalent of the English phrase "Thank you very much, my niece!" The declaration also translates as "Many thanks, my (female) niece!" in English. The pronunciation will be "MOO-tchas GRA-syas mee so-BREE-na" in Uruguayan Spanish.
it's spelled 'niece' and it means "sobrina"
eres bienvenido a mi sobrina bella
nephew = sobrino and = y niece = sobrina
You could say "Gracias mi sobrina hermosa".