In Spanish this would mean teacher or professor. The one you are talking about is masculine, therefor it would be a sir or Mister or Mr.
maestro = master
Anything you would say at a toast in English.
Buon giorno, maestro! in Italian means "Hello, teacher (or master)!" in English.
Maestro e bambino in Italian means "master and baby boy" in English.
teacher
it means: my teacher no. which doesn't make a lot of sense. mi= my. maestro= teacher or master and no= no.
Sensei is a famous Japanese word, so you can say it in english and spanish as well. Synonyms: teacher: profesor master: maestro
Translation: What do you say when your teacher talks too fast?
seré tu maestro
it means What is the teacher going to do?
¿Quién es tu maestro/maestra de Sociología? or ¿Quién es tu maestro/maestra de Ciencias Sociales? You also can use "profesor/profesora" instead of "maestro/maestra"
"A master" is an English equivalent of un maestro. The masculine singular phrase also may mean "one (1) master." The pronunciation will be "oon MEYE-stro" in Italian.