de nada means its nothing.
It is 'de nada' and would mean "you're welcome" (replied after given some thanks)
In Brazilian Portuguese, you can say "De nada" or "Por nada" to mean 'You are welcome'.
In Portuguese, you can say "de nada" or "por nada" to mean "you are welcome."
"Nada de qué" in Spanish means "nothing of what" in English. This phrase is often used to express confusion or a lack of understanding in response to someone's statement or question.
The Yiddish translation of 'de nada' is 'פֿאַרנישט' (farnisht).
De nada means thank you. Que haces means what are you doing?
Nada means 'Nothing'. De donde eres? is the informal way of saying 'Where are you from?'
De nada. De nada.
De Nada is Spanish, not Welsh. It means "you're welcome" or "it's nothing".
Yo te he llamado y escrito; y tu nada. Pense que te olvidaste de mi.
For nothing
youre welcome, you are pretty ill see you tomorrow
It means "You are welcome beautiful woman."
De nada typically is used as a response to a thanks. It's a Spanish equivalent of 'you're welcome'. It's usually translated as [You're] welcome, No problem, or [It's] nothing. In this case, it most likely means I'm fine and [how about] you. de = from, of. nada = nothing. y = and. tu = you.
DE nada means "you're welcome" or "no problem" in Spanish. It is translated literally as "of nothing." however, d nada I am not sure of.
It is 'de nada' and would mean "you're welcome" (replied after given some thanks)
Translation: Nothing, and you?