You spend a lot of time at home.
Hi. I'm on my way home. Where are you at?
This phrase translates to "Are you stupid? There are beans in the house" in English. It is a colloquial expression used to express disbelief or frustration.
this one wants to go home :)
oak house
Translation: ayudar en casa
its: estas en tu casa? :)
Translation: Do you speak English at home?
"At home" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase a casa.Specifically, the preposition a means "at, to". The feminine noun casa translates as "home, house". The pronunciation will be "a KA-sa" in Italian.
"House of Furini" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Casa di Furini.Specifically, the feminine noun casa means "house." The preposition di means "of." The pronunciation is "KAH-zah dee foo-REE-nee."
In my house with my husband and my family
A lot of work at the back of the house
The Portuguese equivalent of the English question 'Are you at home' is the following: Voce esta em casa?; Tu estas em casa. The Portuguese pronunciation is the following: voh-SAY eh-SHTAH eng KAH-zuh; and too eh-SHTAH zeng KAH-zuh. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'voce' and 'tu' mean 'you'; 'esta' and 'estas' '[You] are'; 'em' 'in'; 'casa' 'house'. The first example tends to be used in Brazil. Either of the examples may be used in Portugal. For peninsular Portuguese still uses the 'you' [tu] of children and the close circle of family and friends. Another, distinctively Brazilian Portuguese way of asking the question is the following: Voce fica em casa? This alternative verb is pronounced as FEE-kuh.