"You are from... ." and "You are of... ." are literal English equivalents of the incomplete Spanish phrase Eres de... . The pronunciation of the second person informal singular in the present indicative verb tense and the preposition will be "EY-re-sthey" in Spanish.
¡De nada, chico! in Spanish means "You're welcome, boy!" (literally, "From nothing, boy!") in English.
¿Es la madre de tu prima? in Spanish means "Is she the mother of your cousin?" in English.
¿Y de qué país eres? So, what country are you from?
It means "Long live the Fifth of May," translated from Spanish.
"et de" means "and of".
it means: are you from Chicago?
Well, from what I can understand it means "you are very atractive and I would like to know where you are from" Hope it helped
The question in Spanish "¿De dónde eres?" is translated as "Where are you from?". You would respond in Spanish: "Soy de ....." (city of birth or residence) Example: Soy de Asunción, Paraguay (I am from Asunción, Paraguay)
"Perhaps you aren't Cindi's little sister" is a literal English equivalent of the Spanish phrase Acaso tu no eres la hermanita de Cindi. The pronunciation will be "a-KA-so too no EY-res la ER-ma-NEE-ta they SEEN-dee" in Spanish.
de donde eres is where are you from
The word is "de."
de donde eres = where are you from
"On" in Spanish can be "en", o "encima de".
De donde means "from where."
"House of the angels" in English is casa de los ángelesin Spanish.
In English, he is called Francis of Assisi.
de dónde eres