Both of them are valid translations. In latin languages the predicative can come before or after the substantive, with no difference in the meaning of the sentence.
I don't know how to speak spanish, but I'm Brazilian, and portuguese looks a lot like spanish. :)
"Life" and "the life" are English equivalents of the Spanish phrase la vida.
Specifically, the feminine singular definite article la-- which may or may not be included in the English translation according to context -- means "the." The feminine noun vida translates as "life." The pronunciation will be "la VEE-tha" in Spanish.
The word vida means "life" in English. (See www.education.yahoo.com>Spanish dictionary>(Type in vida-->life
English= Life is good.Spanish= La vida es buena.
It means "new life" source: I am in Spanish class
It's Spanish.
La Vida.
Amando la vida is a Spanish equivalent of the English phrase "loving life." The phrase translates literally as "loving the life" in English. The pronunciation will be "a-MAN-do la VEE-tha" in Spanish.
This seems to be a mix of Italian and Spanish. 'Loco' is Spanish for 'crazy', and 'vita is Italian for 'life'. Together, they would make the phrase 'The crazy life'. If you wanted it in only Spanish or Italian, then Spanish would be 'La vida loca', and Italian would be 'La vita pazza.'
The phrase "viva la vida loca" is not Swedish, but Spanish. Viva usually means "long live..." or" up with..." in Spanish, while "la vida loca" means "the crazy life". Therefore, this sentence can be translated as "long live the crazy life" in English.
The phrase "viva la vida loca" is not Swedish, but Spanish. Viva usually means "long live..." or" up with..." in Spanish, while "la vida loca" means "the crazy life". Therefore, this sentence can be translated as "long live the crazy life" in English.
"Viva la vida" means "live the life" in spanish.
La means "the" so la rosa is "the rose" when translated from Catalan, Italian or Spanish to English.
la oficina = the office
¿Qué es la historia? in Spanish is "What is the history?" in English.
The feminine singular word la in French, Italian and Spanish is "the" in English.
"I'm living the crazy life" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase Vivo la vida loca. The first person singular present indicative and feminine singular definite article, noun, and adjective also translate into English as "I am living (do live, live) the hectic (insane, mad, wild) life." The pronunciation will be "BEE-vo la VEE-tha LO-ca" in Spanish.
The word vida means "life" in English. (See www.education.yahoo.com>Spanish dictionary>(Type in vida-->life
"Salad" in Spanish is "la ensalada".