i have eaten
Dos días más.
Regreso en dos dias.
dos días de celebración
It will not die .
I haven't eaten in two days, I am ravenous.
Call your doctor.
thats a really dumb question
When denying or responding to questions with "no" in Spanish, you say "No, no...". This is mainly for clarity so the person asking you the question knows that you clearly mean no.Look at it this way:"¿Ya has comido? / ¿Ya comiste?" = "Have you eaten yet?"You would respond with: "No, no he comido todavía / aún", "No, todavía / aún no como" or simply "Todavía no" = "No, I have not eaten yet."Now if we remove one of the "no"s: "No he comido aún / todavía"or "no, todavía / aún no como" It would just translate to: "I have not eaten yet."In Spanish we don't use "ya" in negations like the ones above. Instead we say "todavía" or "aún".
dos
Dos guisantes en una vaina is how you say two peas in a pod in Spanish.
There is two ways to say orange in Spanish, the meanings are different though. Naranja is Spanish for the kind of orange you eat and anaranjado is Spanish for the color orange.