Vos is a form of the Latin word for "you", referring to more than one person. It is used when "you" is the subject or object of the verb, or the object of certain prepositions such as apud ("near, among, at the home of"). Vos is usually omitted when it is the subject of the verb unless extra emphasis is desired, since the information it conveys is already included in the verb.
O all you is the English equivalent of 'O vos omnes'. In the word by word translation, the interjection 'o' means 'o'. The personal possessive pronoun 'vos' means 'you'. The plural 'omnes' means 'all'.
Take up your pens is the English equivalent of 'Prenez vos stylos'. A looser equivalent is 'Get ready to start writing' or 'You may start writing'. In the word by word translation, the verb 'prenez' means '[you all] take'. The personal possessive 'vos' means 'your'. The noun 'stylos' means 'pens'.
Translation: Encantado(a) a conocer-vos.
There is no word in Spanish that exactly translates the English word "stalker". It is currently not in the Spanish Lexicon as of yet. you would say "stalker" as the same way as in the English language. example: Usted es un stalker. You could also say that a stalker is a "acosador" example: Vos SOS un acosador
comment sont vos enfants is the translation. In English, it means How are your children.
It's Spanish for "I love thou."
"¿Qué tal" is the correct translation (with out the "")
One Latin eqivalent of the English phrase 'See you soon' is the following: Videbo te mox; or Videbo vos mox. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'videbo' means '[I] will see'; 'te' means 'you [singular]'; 'vos' means 'you all'; and 'mox' means 'soon'. Another Latin equivalent is the following: Spero te videre mox; or Spero vos videre mox. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'spero' means '[I] hope'; 'videre' means 'to see'.
Yes
It has the exact same function that the word "yo" has in English. It comes from the word "vos", which means "you", and it's used in south american Spanish countries like Uruguay and Argentina. You - u = yo Vos - s = vo (it should me writen with V) Both words, "yo" and "vo" mean: Hey! Or Hey you!
Usted (you formal singular both genders)Ustedes (you formal plural both genders)Tú / vos (you informal singular both genders)Vosotros, as (you formal plural feminine, masculine)*Vos, in modern Spanish is dialectal. In classical Spanish it was formal but less than "usted" and the verb conjugation is different:Vos tenés; a vos te lo digo (dialectal modern Spanish)Vos tenéis; a vos lo digo (standard classical Spanish)
This looks like a very bad Google Translation of the English phrase "Remember that you are dust, and to dust you will soon return"