Normally, traer means "to bring", but you have to be a little careful with this. Despending on the situation, it can be llevar.
There are MANY variations for compound situations "bring about", "bring along" "bring back", and others. They are all different, so the best thing to do is to examine a good dictionary.
No, "bring" is a verb that means to carry something to a place.
The verb "necesitar" in Spanish means "to need."
This is really a combination of a verb and an adjective in both languages. In English, this is the verb "to be" plus the modifier "full". In Spanish, this is the verb "estar" and the adjective "lleno/a". So "to be full" in Spanish is "Estar lleno/a". The related Spanish verb "llenar" means "to fill".
Yes. It is a verb which means: to bring to completion or reality.
The verb for peace is "to pacify." It means to bring peace or calm to a situation.
It comes from the verb Escuchar, which means "to listen". Escuchamos is the 1st person plural of that verb and it means, "We listen".
The verb hacer means "to do" or "to make."
The pronoun attached to the end of the Spanish verb that means "to communicate" is "-se" for the reflexive form, "comunicarse."
in spanish, "sentir" means "to feel". its a stem changing verb.
The Spanish verb caminar means to walk.
divertirse
"Tener" is the Spanish verb meaning "to have", as in posession of something. There is a second verb in Spanish, "haber", which means "to have" when used as an auxilary verb for perfect tenses, i.e. "have done".