"andas" is the 2nd person form of andar which means to walk...so andas is you walk :-)
Qué buscas? Qué andas buscando?
Prima Dande Andas
Dime con quien andas y te sacare los ojos.
Där du andas was created on 2008-08-20.
"Where are ya, pal?" - ("Compa" is an informal short-hand for "compañero," which means "companion" or "comrade").
"¿Cómo te va?" or "¿Cómo andás?" would be the term used in places like Uruguay and Argentina but in other Spanish speaking countries would be more common "¿Cómo andas?". Check that the difference between the second one in Uruguay and the one in countries like Spain is the pronunciation. "andás" makes an emphasis in the second "a" when pronounciating while "andas" doesn't.
Edwin Andas Neatby has written: 'An index of aggravations and amelioratons' -- subject(s): Homeopathy
Literally this means: "much thanks friend how do you walk?" But we would understand it to mean "Thanks, man. How's it going? "andas" is a conjugation of the verb "andar" which means to walk (basically). So "andas" means "you walk" But spanish speakers in this context understand it to mean "how are you walking?" Like "how are you doing? Or "how's the path that you're taking?" Not literally this translations but this is the "feel" of the statement. Which this "feel is the same as "how's it going?"
It's spelled wrong and it's ungrammatical. It means: "my son, you also walk the baiselia." (baiselia is not a Spanish word).
well i know that in spanish its "dime con quien andas y te dire quien eres", if that helps at all
it's saying "are you in love".
English cucumber and Spanish onion.