¡Sí, día! in Spanish is "Yes, day!" in English.
This is how it is spelled: Más said like m,aah,s
Actually IT CAN BE TRANSLATED TO ENGLISH AS FOLLOWED. mother 's heart is like a rose.
Arturo Cuya s has written: 'Appleton's revised English-Spanish and Spanish-English dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Spanish, English language, Spanish language, English
da = give(s) loca = insane/mad (female)
Henry Neuman has written: 'Neumann and Baretti's dictionary of the Spanish and English languages ..' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, English language, Spanish, Spanish language 'A pocket dictionary of the Spanish and English languages' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, English language, Spanish, Spanish language
Steven M. Kaplan has written: 'Essential English/Spanish and Spanish/English legal dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Law, Spanish, English language, English, Spanish language 'Wiley's English-Spanish, Spanish-English business dictionary =' 'Wiley electrical and electronics engineering dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Electric engineering, Electronics 'Kluwer Law International English/Spanish Dictionary' 'Wiley's English-Spanish Spanish-English dictionary of psychology and psychiatry =' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, Spanish, Psychology, Psychiatry, Spanish language, English language
Esse in Italian means "(the letter) s" in English.
果物 /ku da mo no/ is Japanese for 'fruit(s)'. フルーツ /fu ruu tsu/ , the same word inserted into Japanese, can also be used.
"Later, my love!" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase ¡Más tarde, mi amor! The promise models an informal way of saying "See you later, my love!" The pronunciation will be "mas TAR-dey mee a-MOR" in Uruguayan Spanish.
D'un con in French means "of an a*s" in English.
Sarita Mlawer has written: 'Webster's worldwide English/Spanish Spanish/English dictionary =' -- subject(s): English, Dictionaries, Spanish language, English language, Spanish
cena (pronounced "se-nah" ['se' as in second]. Can also be a 'th' sound instead of 's'. Most of Spain will use 'th' while Latin America uses 's'.)