You're so amazing is an English equivalent of 'Usted es tan sorprendente'. The subject pronoun 'Usted' means 'you'. The verb 'es' means [you] are'. The adverb 'tan'means 'so'. The adjective 'sorprendente' means 'surprising, amazing'. All together, they're pronounced 'oo-steh-eh-stahn-sohr-prehn-DEHN-teh'.
"Answer me as soon as you can."
simple; broken
(they/you all are) so happy
that is so cute
Tan Tan
Usted está tan pensativo. Or...Estás tan pensativo.
"Usted es tan perfecta" translates to "You are so perfect" in English.
I am so happy with you.
Usted es tan hermoso como los cielos
"Usted es tan elegante" translates to "You are so elegant" in English. It is a compliment used to express admiration for someone's grace and style.
mutha isn't a word..."puse como usted tan significa" means "you put like you so mean" except it's the mean as in significance, not as in opposite of nice
The Spanish equivalent of the English sentence 'you are so brilliant' is the following: Usted es tan brillante, or Tu eres tan brillante. The Spanish pronunciation is the following: oo-STE eh stah bree-YAN-tay; and too EH-ray sta bree-YAN-tay. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'usted' means 'you'; 'es' 'are'; 'tan' 'so'; 'brillante' 'brilliant'; and 'tu' 'you'; 'eres' 'are'; 'tan' 'so'; 'brillante' 'brilliant'. Spanish speakers aren't required to use subject pronouns. For the verb ending tends to identify whether the subject is first [I], second [you] or third [he/she/it] person. So Usted and tu don't have to be included in the two sample sentences above.
Loosely translated, it means, "You're as old as he/she/it is.
If you are asking for a translation, it's Spanish, and means, "Beautiful girl, you are so sweet."
Translation: tan loco
"As" is an English equivalent of the Spanish word tan. The adverb also translates into English as "so" or "such" according to context. Regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation will be "tahn" in Spanish.
The Spanish equivalent of the English sentence 'you are so brilliant' is the following: Usted es tan brillante, or Tu eres tan brillante. The Spanish pronunciation is the following: oo-STE eh stah bree-YAN-tay; and too EH-ray sta bree-YAN-tay. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'usted' means 'you'; 'es' 'are'; 'tan' 'so'; 'brillante' 'brilliant'; and 'tu' 'you'; 'eres' 'are'; 'tan' 'so'; 'brillante' 'brilliant'. Spanish speakers aren't required to use subject pronouns. For the verb ending tends to identify whether the subject is first [I], second [you] or third [he/she/it] person. So Usted and tu don't have to be included in the two sample sentences above.