It means what classes are you taking this semester?
You reply with the number of classes you're taking this year.
"este lunes" = This monday or the next monday lunes = monday
"Este es mi amigo" translates to "This is my friend" in English.
it is ungrammatical. It means "of mine this"
"Este" in Spanish means "this" in English. It is a demonstrative pronoun used to refer to something close to the speaker.
Estoy tomando dos clases este semestre
Spanish grammar and syntax require that there be a fairly close proximity of the noun and the adjective. In this example the only noun and adjective that match in number (but not gender) are 'clases' and 'varios.' To be a proper adjective, it should be 'varias' the feminine version, because 'clase' is a feminine noun. Proper syntax, in this case, puts the adjective BEFORE the noun: 'varias clases.' The results look like this: "Tengo varias clases este semestre."
It means "How many books for your classes this semester?"
= 'What classes are you taking this semester?' Possible answer: 'Tomo clases de (ingles, frances, matematicas, geografia, ciencia, etc.)' = 'I am taking classes in (English, French, maths, geography, science, etc.)
You reply with the number of classes you're taking this year.
How's your schedule this semester?
yo tengo tomo la psicologia, y nutricion.
"I have four classes in the morning" in Spanish is "Tengo cuatro clases en la mañana". It is pronounced "TANE-go CUA-trow CLA-sace ehn la mahn-YA-na". Please see the Related link below for confirmation of the translation.
"How many classes are you taking this year?"
It means: "academic classes that you study this year"
Tomas Pinto Brandao has written: 'Este e o bom governo de Portugal'
Este sau nu este Ion was created in 2005.