¡De qué!
¡No hay de qué!
¡No es nada!
¡Por nada!
Well de nada does mean your welcome but just plan nada means none.
There are several ways to tell someone to leave in Spanish. One can say dejar. Another way is to say salir. Yet a third way is to say abandonar.
para nada actually means of course not you know the way they say UK lol
It is another way of saying "you welcome" but in a more caring way. It is like saying, "it was nothing honey". Literally means, "for nothing my life". Nada=nothing; Vida=Life.
The best way to say "No I don't" in Spanish is to say No, no me.
The best way to say "none" in Spanish would be ninguno.
Well de nada does mean your welcome but just plan nada means none.
The way to say "you're welcome" in Spanish is "de nada." Spanish is the official language of 21 countries.
mas nah is slang for no morethe correct way to say it in Spanish is más nada
"No te entuendo pa nada" is not a correct phrase in Spanish. It seems to be a combination of "no te entiendo" (I don't understand you) and "no entiendo nada" (I don't understand anything). The correct way to say it would be "No te entiendo para nada" or "No entiendo nada."
Bienvenido = for a ManBienvenida = for a WomanBienvenidos = welcome for a group of men or a mixed groupBienvenidas = welcome for a group of women
Another way to say Mother is Ma, Mama, Mom ,or Madre(spanish).
another way to say "large" is grande in spanish or big
The English equivalent of the Spanish phrase 'no, nada' is the following: no [thank you], nothing [for me]. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'no' means 'no'; and 'nada' means 'nothing'. And it's the exact same use, and meaning, in Portuguese.
"ticket" translates to, "billete" in Spanish. Another way to say it is "boleto".
There are several ways to tell someone to leave in Spanish. One can say dejar. Another way is to say salir. Yet a third way is to say abandonar.
No hay de que. Literally, it means, "there is not of that," or, "Nothing to it." It's a more polite Spanish way to say de nada, (of nothing) which is a way of saying, "You're welcome."