"Nothing is happening" is one English equivalent of the Spanish phrase No pasa nada.
Specifically, the adverb no is "not." The present indicative verb pasa means "(it) does happen, happens, is happening" in this context. The adverb/feminine noun nada translates as "nothing."
The pronunciation will be "noh PA-sa NA-tha" in Spanish.
From Spanish, Nada means 'nothing'.
'Nada grande' is a phrase from the Portuguese and Spanish languages. The word-by-word translation of the phrase is nothing, which is the meaning of 'nada'; and big, or great, which is the meaning of 'grande'. There are interpretations other than the literal. But they depend upon the situation.
It is Spanish for "I loved you for nothing"
The literal translation of 'mas que nada' is 'but that is nothing'. If we were going to say that phrase in English we would use the words 'no way!' or 'come on!'.
Nada is the Spanish word for "nothing"
From Spanish, Nada means 'nothing'.
'Nada grande' is a phrase from the Portuguese and Spanish languages. The word-by-word translation of the phrase is nothing, which is the meaning of 'nada'; and big, or great, which is the meaning of 'grande'. There are interpretations other than the literal. But they depend upon the situation.
It can be translated to english as followed. Than nothing or never-mind.
The English equivalent of the Spanish phrase 'no, nada' is the following: no [thank you], nothing [for me]. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'no' means 'no'; and 'nada' means 'nothing'. And it's the exact same use, and meaning, in Portuguese.
The phrase "de nada" is an interjection. It is used in the US to mean "you're welcome". This is also the Spanish translation for the same phrase.
It is Spanish for "I loved you for nothing"
You're welcome is the usual translation. Literally it means "of nothing".
The term 'nada' is a word from the Portuguese and Spanish languages. In English, the translation is 'nothing'. The equivalent in Italian is niente.
The meaning in English of the Spanish phrase 'de nada chico' is the following: '[It's] nothing, man'; 'No problem, man'; or '[You're] welcome, man'. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'de' means 'from' or 'of'; 'nada' 'nothing'; 'chico' 'boy' or 'very young man'. Unlike the equivalent in Spanish, use of the word 'boy' may be seen as condescending and somewhat insulting in English. So it probably works best not to go for a literal translation in this case.
The literal translation of 'mas que nada' is 'but that is nothing'. If we were going to say that phrase in English we would use the words 'no way!' or 'come on!'.
"De nada" is the Spanish translation of 'You're welcome', though it actually means "It's nothing".
"Da nada" is a phrase in Spanish that translates to "You're welcome" in English. It is used as a response to someone thanking you for something.