SÃ, soy cómica in the feminine and SÃ, soy cómico in the masculine are literal Spanish equivalents of the English phrase "Yes, I am funny." The two phrases also may include the optional subject pronoun yo ("I") if they want to emphasize the particular funniness of the speaker. The respective pronunciations will be "SEE soy KO-mee-ka" in the feminine and "SEE soy KO-mee-ko" in the masculine in Spanish.
¡Sí, día! in Spanish is "Yes, day!" in English.
"In other words, yes (or) no" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase ¡O sea sí, no! The phrase translates literally as "Or let it be yes (or) no!" in English. The pronunciation will be "o SEY-a see no" in Uruguayan Spanish.
Si el jefe de entender
Yes, Harry Potter was translated into Spanish.
Si means "yes" in Spanish (Castilian), Catalan, Asturian, Corsican, Galician, Italian, Papiamentu, and Hokkien. It also affirms a negative statement in French (which would be translated as "yes" in English, but most instances of "yes" in English would be translated as "oui" in French).
A in Portuguese is "the" in English.
"Yes!" is an English equivalent of the Spanish word ¡Sí!The pronunciation sounds the same as that of si for "but" or the musical note "B" even though the latter word carries no accent over the vowel. The pronunciation will be "sea" in Uruguayan Spanish.
"Yes, love!" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase ¡Sì, amor! The affirmative adverb and masculine singular noun may be used with a female or male audience. The pronunciation will be "see a-mor" in Spanish.
Yes as Spain is a christian country and mostly catholics, the bible is translated in Spanish.
"Yes! No!" in English is Sì! No! in Italian.
si is "yes" in English
English is the only language she's fluent in.