MAHN-teh-KEE-yah theh kah-kah-WAH-teh is a Spanish pronunciation of 'mantequilla de cacahuate'. The feminine noun 'mantequilla' means 'butter'. The preposition 'de'means 'of'. The masculine noun 'cacahuate' means 'peanut'. All together, they mean 'peanut butter'.
"A flower" and "one flower" are English equivalents of the Spanish phrase un flor. The pronunciation of the masculine singular phrase will be "oon flawr" in Spanish.
"My goal" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase mi tanto. The masculine singular phrase also translates as "my point" in English. The pronunciation will be "mee TAN-to" in Spanish.
"Me neither!" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase ¡A mí tampoco! The phrase translates literally as "To me neither!" in English. The pronunciation will be "a mee tam-PO-ko" in Uruguayan Spanish.
No, Sì, amore! is not Spanish phrase. The affirmative adverb and masculine singular noun instead originate as a phrase in the Italian language. The pronunciation will be "see a-MO-rey" in Italian and "see a-mor" for the Spanish equivalent, ¡Sí, amor!
"The little (female) Cuban" is a literal English equivalent of the Spanish phrase la cubanita. The pronunciation of the feminine singular phrase will be "la KOO-va-NEE-ta" in Spanish.
"I desire her (him, you)" is a literal English equivalent of the Spanish phrase Le deseo. The pronunciation of the declarative phrase in the first person singular of the present indicative will be "ley they-SEY-o" in Spanish.
"Her welcome" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase su bienvenida. The pronunciation of the feminine singular phrase -- which also translates as "his (its, their, your) welcome" -- will be "soo VYEM-bey-NEE-tha" in Spanish.
"User ID" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase ID de usuario. The pronunciation of the masculine singular prepositional phrase will be "ee-they they oo-SWA-ryo" in Spanish.
Amando la vida is a Spanish equivalent of the English phrase "loving life." The phrase translates literally as "loving the life" in English. The pronunciation will be "a-MAN-do la VEE-tha" in Spanish.
"Traveling" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase de viaje.Specifically, the preposition de means "of". The masculine noun viajetranslates as "trip, voyage". The pronunciation will be "dey vya-ke" in Spanish.
Una milla is a Spanish equivalent of the English phrase "a mile." The feminine singular phrase also translates as "one mile" in English. The pronunciation will be "OO-na MEESH-sha" in Uruguayan Spanish.
"Factor pair" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase par de factores. The pronunciation of the masculine phrase -- which translates literlly as "pair of factors" -- will be "par they fak-TO-reyss" in Spanish.