As written, this means "and from where SOS".
if you mean, "y de donde eres" it means, "and where are you from"
both words mean the same, but " De donde sois Marta y tu" is used in Spain and "De donde son MArta y tu" is used in Latin America
Nada means 'Nothing'. De donde eres? is the informal way of saying 'Where are you from?'
"Y tú, ¿qué estás haciendo?" means, "And you? What are you doing?"
Translation: "And where are you from?" Literal : And of where are you?
Too/also, and where are you from
And where are you from, my friend?
That would stand for: "Where are Maria and you from?"
"Si y tú, ¿de dónde?" translates to "And you, where are you from?" in English.
Or this* well and where are you from? (*If 'esta' has an accent on the 'a': 'is he/she//are you')
It means, "...and you are from Argentina or from Chile."
Quien eres = Who are you Como te llamas = What is your name y de donde eres = and where are you from