Answer 1
Si usted es el que / la que / quien provoca que le / lo / la traiga de aquí para allá.
Si ustedes son los que / las que / quienes provocan que les / los / las traiga de aquí para allá.
Si eres tú el que / la que / quien provoca que te traiga de aquí para allá.
Si vosotros sois los que / quienes provocáis que os traiga de aquí para allá.
Si vosotras sois las que / quienes provocáis que os traiga de aquí para allá.
Answer 2
Translation: Pero obligas que yo te cace por todas partes. (But you make me chase you everywhere)
Answer 1's various iterations translate closer to: If you are one that makes me bring you from here to there.
to make a person get out
two big Spanish ships came to chase them for stealing there gold so Drake went around America and around Asia and back to England.
Hacer.Hacer means to make.
The verb hacer means "to do" or "to make."
It doesn't mean anything. "Que" means "what"; "no" means "no"; "you" is not a Spanish word. It might refer to "yo", which means "I". In any case, the combination doesn't make sense in Spanish.
No
It means 'I do' or 'I make'. It is the first person conjugation from the verb Hacer which means 'to do'
Mejorar (which literally means, to make better)
Hacer means "to do" or "to make" in Spanish. It is a commonly used verb that can be used to express a wide variety of actions or activities.
The Spanish word that can be formed from those letters is "balsa", which means raft in English.
Basically it means 'to' or 'at'. The context should make clear which.
Hacer means "To do" or "To make" depending on the context.