The officlal, formal Portuguese equivalent of the English word 'grandma' is the following: a avó. The Portuguese pronunciation is the following: ah ah-VAW. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'a' means 'the'; 'avó' 'grandmother'. The Portuguese equivalent of the English word 'grandfather' is the following: o avô. The Portuguese pronunciation is the following: oo ah-VOH. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'o' means 'the'; 'avô' 'grandfather'.
The official way to say 'grandma' in Portuguese is "avรณ."
My Grandma is kind, loving, and always there to offer care and support. She is the heart of our family and has a special way of making everyone feel loved and cherished.
first you want to ask your grandma is their any job in house to do.when she say's yes ,say i will do it and please help me to do the job. after that say am too tired we can rest for some hours. If she did n allow pleasely ask then she will allow take her and go to a lonely place.then say to her i have one wound in my chest please check it. Then she will say show. then take your chest close to her then she will toch it and look then ask to her do you have any wound by asking it suddenly you want to press in her boob and say i think there is a wound then suddenly take her boob from her bra. and touch it smoothly. this way you can touch your grandma's boooooob
An alternative way to say retired is to use the term "no longer working" or "ceased working."
The correct way to say the statement is "No one knows how to stop the process of aging." This phrasing emphasizes that there is a lack of knowledge among individuals about halting the aging process.
The sentence should be revised to "I am too old and am retiring."
"Fuzzy" in Portuguese is "fofinho" or "peludinho."
Feliz.
Texas is translated to "Texas" in Portuguese as well.
In Portuguese, you say "minha irmรฃ" to refer to 'my sister'.
The correct way to say Happy Birthday to someone who speaks European Portuguese is as follows. Say "Feliz aniversario." That means Happy Birthday in Portuguese.
I personally think that the language the people in Brazil speak is Portuguese but, if you think differently just sign up and answer in your own way =)
In Spanish, Grandpa is Abuelo.
" the way someone who speaks portuguese would (BE...)" > " O JEITO DE ALGUÉM QUE FALA PORTUGUÊS [dizer isso*] seria (...)". * [to say this]
The same way, Sam. Unless that's a short for Samantha for instance, that would be "Samanta" in Portuguese.
Como estás? (not formal way) Como está? (formal way)
"Neither is Grandma" is a sentence because it includes a subject and a verb pertaining to the subject (the subject does it). "Neither is Grandma" can be rewritten as "Grandma is neither", which is more obviously a sentence, though we would not normally say it that way.
He said "I wish my grandma was a train, that way I could be dead when she comes for me".