It depends on use. At the beginning of a sentence, as in "So I went to the store", you would use "así que". "Así que fui a la tienda".
If you use it as an amplifier, as in "You are so tall", you would use "tan". "Eres tan alto".
I am regular/methodical/orderly I am middling, so-so
regular = regular
okay
"regula" isn't a word in Spanish. Did you mean: regalo (gift) regular (regular, or to regulate) regla (rule)
they speak the regular spanish except some put and accent to some of the words for example regular spanish for wait is "esperate" and they say "perate" and instead of you in regular spanish "tu" they say "vos" that's pretty much the only difference the languages have.
go to the regular facebook and then go to change language an put spanish and it should give it in spanish jaja i have mine in spanish = ) LOL
Un borrador
Yes
Despierto is a conjugation of the Spanish word for wake. I'm not a Spanish speaker myself, so I'm unaware of the regular form of the verb. Next time, try being self-reliant and googling it at the least.
No. Estudiar is a regular verb in Spanish. When conjugating this verb it follows all the rules for -ar verbs.
There is no such word in Spanish. If you mean to translate from English to Spanish, in Spanish that is "padre" (the same as the regular meaning of "father").
Por lo regular, ¿quién...?