The spanish phrase for "gift of life" would be "regalo de vida".
The Greek word for gift is the word munus. The Spanish word for gift is regalo and the Swedish word for gift is present.Δώρο [dOro]
regalo
in english? a present in spanish? un regalo
"I give a gift" as a verb and "gift" as a noun are English equivalents of the Spanish word regalo.Specifically, context indicates whether the word functions as the first person expression of the present indicative of the present infinitive regalare or as the singular form of a masculine noun. The word means "(I) am awarding. giving/giving a gift, award/give/give a gift, do award/give/give a gift" as a verb. It translates as "gift, present" literally -- and "bargain" or "delight" loosely -- in its form as a noun.Whatever the meaning or use, the pronunciation remains "rey-GA-lo" in Spanish.
Vida.
vida
"regula" isn't a word in Spanish. Did you mean: regalo (gift) regular (regular, or to regulate) regla (rule)
The will must be specific as to whether the gift is a life estate. If the gift is not defined as a gift for life then it will become the beneficiary's property absolute.The will must be specific as to whether the gift is a life estate. If the gift is not defined as a gift for life then it will become the beneficiary's property absolute.The will must be specific as to whether the gift is a life estate. If the gift is not defined as a gift for life then it will become the beneficiary's property absolute.The will must be specific as to whether the gift is a life estate. If the gift is not defined as a gift for life then it will become the beneficiary's property absolute.
"Gift" in Spanish is "regalo". It is pronounced "ray-GAH-low". Please see this site for confirmation of the translation: http://www.answers.com/library/Translations
the root word for gift
'Life's gift' should indeed have an apostrophe, as the gift is belonging to life (possessive pronoun), as it were.
gift