In Spanish, "last one number 4" can be translated as "el último número 4." If you need to convey that there is a specific context, such as referring to the last item in a list or group identified as number 4, you might say "el último de los números 4."
Just the last one, from Spanish "pecado", meaning sin. A "pecadillo" would be a little sin.
That would be Super Trouper in 1980.
The number one in Spanish is uno.
That would be Super Trouper in 1980.
It is uno.
It is Spanish. I have that last name so i should probably know. I am Mexican and have done research on it. Also, if you go to Zaragoza, Spain and have that last name, you would be honored. One of their heroes had that last name.
in Spanish you would write no one like this: nadie
There are several ways to say "last" in Spanish, and it depends on the way you use it in English. Last as in "Last in line", then it would be úlitmo/última (último en fila) Last as in "Last Friday", then it would be 'que pasó" (El viernes que pasó) Last as in "It will last one hour", then you would use a conjugation of "tardar".
one thousand = mil five hundred = quinientos So it would be: mil quinientos
this number is one gustavo
Spanish number format is fairly similar to that of English. 'Thousand' in Spanish is 'mil', and the increments of hundreds are, similar to English, formed by adding a number in front of the word for 'hundreds', which is 'cientos' (one hundred is 'ciento'). For example, 'dos' is 'two' in Spanish, so 'two hundred' is 'doscientos'. 'Four' in Spanish is 'cuatro'. Thus where we would say 'one thousand, four hundred' in English, the Spanish equivalent is 'mil, cuatrocientos'.
that would be me Emily but i cant say my last name so there