Tu es toujours là was created on 2002-02-22.
"¿Cuál es tu nacionalidad?", or "¿Cuál es su nacionalidad?", depending on whether you want to use the familiar or friendly form (for "you"), or the formal form.
24 different ways. wow that took a while turkey- TU cheese- C lettuce- L tomato- T Tu, C, L, T Tu, C, T L Tu, L,C,T Tu,L,T,C Tu,C,T,L Tu,C,L,T C,TU,L,T C,TU,T,L C,L,TU,T C,L,T,TU C,T,L,TU C,T,TU,L L,TU,T,C L,TU,C,T L,C,TU,T L,C,T,TU L,T,TU,C L,T,C,TU T,TU,C,L T,TU,L,C T,L,TU,C T,L,C,TU T,C,TU,L T,C,L,TU
That's Spanish (bad Spanish) and means "What your name". Correct Spanish would be, for example, "¿Cuál es tu nombre?"
¡Eso depende de cuál es tu país!
Audacity, audacity, always audacity!
What's your favorite color is an English equivalent of '¿Cuál es tu color favorito'. The interrogative/relative 'cuál' means 'what, which'. The verb 'es' means '[he/she/it] is'. The possessive 'tu'means 'your'. The masculine noun 'color' means 'color'. The masculine adjective 'favorito' means 'favorite'. All together, they're pronounced 'kwah-leh-stoo koh-LOHR fah-voh-REE-toh'.
"fútbol", but this would be called "soccer" in the US. What we call "football" would be "fútbol americano".
'I will love you always' in French: "Je t'aimerai toujours." (zheh temerai too-joor) 'I love you always' in French: "Je t'aime toujours." (zheh tem too-joor)
"But i am a woman and you ask me to be your boyfriend" The problem is the word "novio" novio= boyfriend novia= girlfriend Most spanish words ending in "o" refers to a male, and words ending in "a" refers to a female. Example: -She is ugly ---- Ella es fea -He is ugly ---- Él es feo
je t aime means I love you Je l aime means I love her Je l aime toujours pronounced toojoor, means i still love her Although "toujours" (which means "always") is acceptable to mean "still," the normal adverb used for "still" is "encore" (which also means "again" and "yet"). Also, there should be an apostrophe between "l" and "aime," not a space. Therefore, "Je l'aime encore" means "I still love her."
Specifically for a family relationship, you can ask "¿Cuál es tu parentesco conmigo?".
"You're the love of my life" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Tu es l'amour de ma vie.Specifically, the subject pronoun tu means "(informal singular) you." The verb es means "(informal singular you) are." The masculine singular definite article l'* means "the." The masculine noun amour means "love." The preposition de means "of." The feminine singular definite article la means "the." The feminine noun vie means "life."The pronunciation will be "tyoo ey lah-moor duh mah vee" in French.*The vowel e drops -- and is replaced by an apostrophe -- before a noun which begins with a vowel.