It means, "Wassup?"
Buenos recuerdos
nothing, what about you?
"whats up, f*ckin ugly"
If you leave
Translation: I want everyone to know that your pain hurts me.
Translation: Me too, what's hangin'?
Buenos recuerdos
nothing, what about you?
Ke onda should be spelled Que onda but is a form of a slaing as if you would say Wut's up instead of What are you up to? But they all mean the same thing which it's What are you up to? And Ke = Que From Newyorkminute1: Que onda? means how are the waves as in vibes, and Que haces? means What are you doing or making?, and o Que? means or what so.. you have What's up. what are you doing, or what?
There isn't an exact phrase, but this might work Translation: ¿Que onda primo?
"whats up, f*ckin ugly"
Translation: What's up old man? How's everything over there?
Que tal/que tal estás/que onda ese/que onda raza/que onda tio. It depends if you're talking to a Spaniard or a Latin American. I guess the first one is the safest to use if you speak no Spanish at all.
why not
"Que Onda" is a slang way of saying "What's up?". It's a colloquialism of Mexico based on the (slang) phrase "Que Pasa". Unique to Spanish spoken in Mexico, not all Spanish speakers are familiar with the term, just as some in the US don't understand certain British slang.
"Que:" means what, that, who in Spanish - If you provde to me a sentence in which the word is used, I will be able to provde its exact translation.
No. You would speak Spanish with Mexican slang variations:"Como esta ese?", "Que pacho?", "Que onda?" are the equivalent to "Wassup!" in the English language.