chambre = bedroom
I am hungry, very hungry(though the sentence isn't grammatically correct. It should be 'Tengo hambre, mucho hambre.' In Spanish, you literally "have hunger.")
Literally, it would mean "At what time do you have hunger generally." A better translation would be "Generally, what time are you hungry?"
I am hungry. Literally 'I have hunger'.
It is unclear what "starf" is.If it is "Start", then the translation is "Empezar" or "Comenzar"If it is "Starve", then the translation is "Hambrear" or "Padecer de Hambre"
Tengo bastante para comer is "I have enough to eat." I remember someone saying that "i am full" means something else in Spanish.....
¿Que pides cuando tienes mucha hambre? This is a Spanish question meaning in English, What do you order when you're very hungry?
Colloquial, "very hungry". Literal, "died of starvation".
Two choices: (1) Sí, tengo hambre; (2) No, no tengo hambre.
To answer the question: ¿Tienes hambre ahora? you would say either: Sí, tengo hambre ahora. OR No, no tengo hambre ahora.
"Tiene hambre el lobo" translates to "the wolf is hungry" in English. It is a common expression used to convey that someone is very hungry or famished.
Puerto Hambre was created in 1584.
¿Tienes hambre? (Informal, singular) OR ¿Tiene usted hambre? (Formal, singular) OR ¿Tienen ustedes hambre? (Plural)