Te is the indirect object pronoun in Spanish for tu.
El
In Spanish, tu means you and se is the 3rd person reflexive pronoun. Together, it doesn't mean anything.
Complicated. In French, it's not 'We will miss you' but 'you will be missing to us'. Vous nous manquerez Vous - you. Subject pronoun. nous - to us (indirect object pronoun, therefore coming before the verb. manquerez - second person plural, future tense, of manquer (to miss) Of course, if you're talking to an intimate friend, you'll say 'tu nous manqueras'.
The word two has a long OO (long U) vowel sound, as does two and to.It also sounds like the Spanish pronoun tu (you).
tu me donnes le sel > tu me le donnes
you
When you are trying to say "I love you" you conjugate querer in the yo form because you are the one doing the loving. Then you want to answer the question of who or what do I love? Therefore, you use a direct object pronoun to answer this question. Since te is the direct object pronoun for the tú form, that is what you use.
El
In Spanish, tu means you and se is the 3rd person reflexive pronoun. Together, it doesn't mean anything.
The pronoun "your" is tu or su (formal); with plural nouns it is tus or sus.The possessive pronoun "my" is mi or mis (mine would be mio or mios)
It means, "You are a friend." It could also be said as "Amicus tu es" but "es" (the particular form of "to be" implies the pronoun "tu" (you).
In French the grammar for "missing" a person is different. If Harry misses Sally, then in French Sally is the subject of the sentence and Harry is the indirect object. Think of it as Sally is absent, or missing, in Harry's world. So, to answer your question, I miss you. -> Tu me manques.
you tú= you (subject pronoun), but tu (without the accent) means your and is a possessive pronoun
Complicated. In French, it's not 'We will miss you' but 'you will be missing to us'. Vous nous manquerez Vous - you. Subject pronoun. nous - to us (indirect object pronoun, therefore coming before the verb. manquerez - second person plural, future tense, of manquer (to miss) Of course, if you're talking to an intimate friend, you'll say 'tu nous manqueras'.
yo is I and tu is you
It is the familiar singular second-person subject pronoun--in other words, "you" but to only one person and someone you would be close to, not someone you would show more respect to. In Spanish, the subject pronoun has a written accent on the "u"; but without the accent it is the corresponding possessive pronoun "your."
"You're bad" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase ¡Tu eres malo!Specifically, the personal pronoun tu means "(informal singular) you." The verb eres means "(informal singular you) are." The masculine adjective malo means "bad."The pronunciation will be "too EH-rehs MAH-loh" in Spanish.