No. Di can be the imperative of decir, "to say" or "to tell." Di nadacan be the command to "Say nothing!" De is a preposition. De nada literally means "of nothing," and is how "You're welcome" is said in Spanish.
The Italian equivalent of the Portuguese and Spanish phrase 'de nada' translates as the following: di niente. The Italian pronunciation is the following: Dee ni-EHN-tay. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'di' means 'from' or 'of'; 'niente' 'nothing'. The equivalent in English is translated as the following: 'You're welcome'; 'No problem'; 'It's nothing'; and 'Don't mention it'. In all four languages, the phrase may be in response to being thanked.
The Yiddish translation of 'de nada' is 'פֿאַרנישט' (farnisht).
Se dice "De nada" en español.
"Y de nada" is a phrase in Spanish that translates to "and you're welcome" in English. It is commonly used as a response to "gracias" (thank you) to acknowledge gratitude.
In Brazilian Portuguese, you can say "De nada" or "Por nada" to mean 'You are welcome'.
Marco di Mauro
¡Por nada!¡De nada! ¡No es nada! ¡No hay de qué! ¡De qué!
¡De qué! ¡No hay de qué! ¡No es nada! ¡Por nada!
De nada means 'you're welcome'.
The Italian equivalent of the Portuguese and Spanish phrase 'de nada' translates as the following: di niente. The Italian pronunciation is the following: Dee ni-EHN-tay. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'di' means 'from' or 'of'; 'niente' 'nothing'. The equivalent in English is translated as the following: 'You're welcome'; 'No problem'; 'It's nothing'; and 'Don't mention it'. In all four languages, the phrase may be in response to being thanked.
es nada or de nada
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.
De nada. De nada.
The Yiddish translation of 'de nada' is 'פֿאַרנישט' (farnisht).
Na de na = nada de nada = nothing at all
De nada (sounds like gee-nada)
de nada. bien dia!