"The little (female) Cuban" is a literal English equivalent of the Spanish phrase la cubanita. The pronunciation of the feminine singular phrase will be "la KOO-va-NEE-ta" in Spanish.
¿Es la madre de tu prima? in Spanish means "Is she the mother of your cousin?" in English.
This seems to be a mix of Italian and Spanish. 'Loco' is Spanish for 'crazy', and 'vita is Italian for 'life'. Together, they would make the phrase 'The crazy life'. If you wanted it in only Spanish or Italian, then Spanish would be 'La vida loca', and Italian would be 'La vita pazza.'
This is translated to: "What is the thing?"
La chambre in French means "the bedroom" in English.
La vie in French means "the life" in English.
La means "the" so la rosa is "the rose" when translated from Catalan, Italian or Spanish to English.
la oficina = the office
¿Qué es la historia? in Spanish is "What is the history?" in English.
The feminine singular word la in French, Italian and Spanish is "the" in English.
"Salad" in Spanish is "la ensalada".
Translation: la noche
The word nose in Spanish is La Nariz
In English, 'la talla' translates to 'clothing size' or 'measurement.'
La Madre Santísima in Spanish means "the Holy Mother" in English.
Until next time
"The sausage" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase la salchicha. The feminine singular phrase also translates as "the wiener" in English. The pronunciation will be "la sal-TCHEE-tcha" in Barcelona, Catalunya, and in Uruguayan Spanish.
¿Es la madre de tu prima? in Spanish means "Is she the mother of your cousin?" in English.