"Can I get you something to drink?"
tienes sed = you are thirsty tengo sed = I am thirsty
tengo sed = I am thirsty tienes/usted tiene sed = you are thirsty
I would say 50-100
You say "I am thirsty" in Yoruba language of the Western African origin as "Orungbe ngbe mi".
Sitio Sanguinis is Blood Thirsty in Latin.
thirsty 목말라요. Mok Mal La Yo
Tengo sed, which means I have thirst is more common. Yo soy sediento literally means I am or I'm thirsty. To apply that to other subjects, you need to conjugate tener to the subject. So tener sed means 'to have thirst', so if you want to say "you are thirsty" you would conjugate 'tengo' into 'tienes', so you would say "Tu tienes sed."
hegneaseonteareo
He looks as in he is looking at something would be Il regarde He looks as in he looks like David Beckham would be Il ressemble
It means she is thirsty. Literally translates to "She has thirst."
hunger und durst.
The English word 'visitor', is said in African Abaluhya (Luhya) language as "omuchenii".