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.
Maestro e bambino in Italian means "master and baby boy" in English.
Buon giorno, maestro! in Italian means "Hello, teacher (or master)!" 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?
"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.
¿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"