pidamos
hagamos el amor
It's Spanish for "Let's hula hoop."
Translation: Let's make love. Note: It has the same meaning as that phrase does in English.
I guess you mean "Hagamos una peli", wich translation is "let's make a movie"
The cast of Hagamos el Humor - 1991 includes: Gabriela Acher as Various (1991) Estela Garelli as Various (1991) Nelly Lainez as Various (1991) Carlos March as Various (1991) Adriana Mascialino as Various (1991) Manuel Vicente as Various (1991)
Since "let's bang" is apparently a slang expression, I'd need to know what it means in order to translate it!
The statement "haceiendo el amor" is a Spanish term that could be translated as "what are you doing my love?". This type of sentence would usually end in an upside down question mark.
I don't speak spanish fluently but I'm pretty sure there is no word for 'let's' You just use a nosotros command. (Which is just the present tense form of the verb) So for 'let's go' you would say 'vamos'
He/She/It is good estas would be you are good (it's pronounced almost the same)
Gabriela Acher has: Played Various Characters in "Telecataplum" in 1963. Played Amalia in "Muchacha italiana viene a casarse" in 1969. Played Various Characters in "Jaujarana" in 1969. Performed in "Los doctores las prefieren desnudas" in 1973. Performed in "Soy paciente" in 1986. Played Celeste in "Eversmile, New Jersey" in 1989. Played Various (1991) in "Hagamos el Humor" in 1991. Performed in "Gasoleros" in 1998. Played Miriam Cohen in "Cohen vs. Rosi" in 1998. Played Raquel de Meier in "Mi primera boda" in 2011.
The phrase is misspelled, but I'll try to write it, "My love, I want you to know that I like you and I want that what we have works, I like you so much and I want us to do a lot of things together my love and if you have that way" literally is translated that way, but you could use "I love you" instead of "I like you" but in Spanish "Te quiero" and "Te amo" have a different level of romantic level, being "Te amo" the one that shows more love, because "Te amo" literally is "I love you"
hacer means; to do. Its spanish it's a go-go verb meaning it conjugates differently than regular verbs. hago-i do, haces-you do, hace- he she it do, hacemos-we do, hacen-you polite do Not only can hacer mean to do, but it can also mean 'to make'.