long; great while.
I am much better than your ex
well...MUCHO is very in spanish. maybe muchas is the same.
Mean can be ad adverb. For example, the mean man, would be using the word mean as an adverb.
what does jalon mean
For a radio, it would mean "amplitude modulation." For time, it would mean "ante meridian."
long love
Hace mucho tiempo que no se de ti Mucho/Tanto tiempo sin saber de ti It means long time without knowing about you
for a lot of time.
I have waited a long time for this
You see yourself with me for a long time
Lo correcto sería:Te quiero, eres mío; durante mucho tiempo serás mío. --- I love you, you are mine. You will be mine for long time (informal you, singular, in masculine gender)
Hace mucho tiempo.
much time would be: "mucho tiempo" o "bastante tiempo" (depending on context ) too much time would be "demasiado tiempo" I've spent much time getting familiarized -> "he pasado bastante tiempo familiarizandome"
Ya ha pasado mucho tiempo.
No he hablado contigo en mucho tiempo :)
No. If you mean "I have been trying for ages", you might say, "He estado intentando [or: tratando] por mucho tiempo."
This is a whole litany of Spanish phrases:Hola -- HelloBuenos días -- Good Morning¿Cómo estás? -- How are you?Mucho gusto -- Pleased to meet you.Encantado -- Enchanted / Please to meet you.¿Ha cambiado el tiempo? -- Has the weather changed?