I am not going (I am not going to go)
¿yendo algún lugar usted no quiere ir?
"Lugar de nacimiento" is a Spanish phrase that means "place of birth." It is used to refer to the specific location where someone was born.
Yon can meet someone in a place. Or you can go to visit the place. To say that someone "meets a place" would be very unusual.
Yes, "come with me" is a phrase. It is a request or invitation for someone to accompany you to a specific place or activity.
Despise.
"My beautiful granddaughter" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase mi nieta hermosa. The feminine singular phrase models the tendency of Spanish to place adjectives after, not before, their nouns. The pronunciation will be "mee NYEY-ta er-MO-sa" in Uruguayan Spanish.
"Visitar" in Spanish means "to visit" in English. It is a verb used to indicate the action of going to see or spend time with someone or at a place. It is conjugated based on the subject and tense of the sentence.
The noun 'coercion' is a word an act of causing someone to do something or preventing someone from doing something by force or threat. An act of 'coercion' can stop someone from going a certain place, but it is not the definition of the word. Someone can be stopped from going to a place by many means (blockage, insufficient funds, illness, etc.) that do not involve coercion.
The phrase 'put down' can have different meanings depending on the context. It can refer to physically placing something on a surface, euthanizing an animal, or dismissing someone with criticism or disrespect.
"Que sacar" is a phrase in Spanish that translates to "to take out" or "to remove." It can be used when referring to extracting something from a place or situation.
"Tuloy na kayo" is a phrase in Tagalog that translates to "come in" or "keep going." It is commonly used to invite someone to enter a place or to proceed with an action.