Lavarse los dientes. In Spanish you don't brush our teeth, you wash them.
Lavarse los dientes. In Spanish you don't brush our teeth, you wash them.
brush as in brush your teeth is migaku
Lavandose los dientes. (In spanish you wash your teeth; you don't brush them.)
De se brosser les dentsThat means 'to brush one's teeth'
Lava as dentes.
buy a sink then bring him in the room were you put the sink click on him two times on the list it will say brush your teeth click on that then he will walk up to the sink and brush his teeth.
they use its teeth or as i say brush and their body.
brush his pony's teeth
you get gingivitis
In Spanish, "teeth" is said as "dientes."
Get a tooth brush and tooth paste and there brush your teeth….DUH!!
You could say, "Hace una hora que me cepillé los dientes." This literally means "It makes an hour that I brushed my teeth." There's no direct translation for the word "ago" in Spanish. Also, in Spanish when referring to parts of your body, the word "the" is used instead of "my." In this example we say "los dientes" (the teeth) instead of "mis dientes" (my teeth.)