And you, love? What are you doing?
"¿Qué haces tú?" is spanish for "What are you doing?"
"Sin tu amor" means "without your love" in Spanish.
Well, darling, "¿Qué haces para tu cumpleaños?" in Spanish means "What do you do for your birthday?" So, if someone asks you that, they're basically wondering how you celebrate getting one year closer to the sweet release of death. Cheers to another year of existence, I guess!
This phrase in Spanish translates to "What do you do without me by your side, beautiful." It implies that the speaker is wondering how the person manages or copes without their presence.
"Por qué tú necesitas mi amor" translates to "Why do you need my love?" It implies questioning the reasons or motives behind someone's need for affection from you.
"What is your profession?" or "What kind of job do you have?"
'Mira nena que tu (haces' - pronounced 'ase(s)' in some parts) = Look what you're doing, babe
What do you do in your favorite room?
What do you do in your free time.
What happened to you?
It is an incorrect way of saying: "what are you doing".
It means "Very well what are you doing?"
It means, "What do you do on Saturdays?"
here working and you what are you doing
Translated to: "I am well, how are you, what are you doing?"
What do you do to tidy your room?
"¿Qué haces tú?" is spanish for "What are you doing?"