"Moment" is an English equivalent of "momento."
The Spanish word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is "el" ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is "un" ("a, one").
The pronunciation is "moh-MEHN-toh."
The Spanish word 'momento' translates to 'moment' in English.
"Un momento" is a Spanish phrase that translates to "one moment" or "a moment" in English. It is commonly used to ask someone to wait or pause briefly.
"¿Qué estás haciendo en este momento?" in Spanish translates to "What are you doing at this moment?"
It means "my favorite moment of the day" in Spanish.
It is neither English cucumber or Spanish onion.
The Spanish name Joaquín translates to Joaquin in English.
momento
The word momento is Spanish for "moment" (a short time, a second or two).A similarly spelled English word is memento, a souvenir or keepsake.
The word 'momento' is not an English word, it means 'moment' (which is English) in Spanish, Italian and Portuguese
"Teachable moment" is an English equivalent of "momento enseñable."The Spanish word "momento" is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is "el" ("the"), and its singular indefinite article is "un, uno" ("a, one"). The masculine/feminine adjective "enseñable" means "teachable."The pronunciation is "moh-MEHN-toh ehn-seh-NYAH-bleh."
Per il momento, io..." in Italian means "For the moment, I.." in English.
En cualquier momento.
Literally, Un momento de rubio. I don't know if this would be understood in the same way the English idiom is.
Translation: Gran momento
Éste es mi momento.
"¡espera un momento"
Seize the moment!
De momento no puedo