here it comes
If you're not here is the English equivalent of 'Si tu no estas aqui'. In the word by word translation, the conjunction 'si' means 'if'. The personal pronuon 'tu' means 'you'. The adverb 'no' means 'not'. The verb 'estas' means '[you] are'. The adverb 'aqui' means 'here'.
"Quien viene a las diez" means "Who is coming at ten?" in English.
"Aqui esta" means "here it is" in Spanish. It is used to indicate that something is being presented or provided to someone.
huh/ You're not clear enough. Du
Aqui vive is Portuguese for here lives......
I have (it) here.
If you're not here is the English equivalent of 'Si tu no estas aqui'. In the word by word translation, the conjunction 'si' means 'if'. The personal pronuon 'tu' means 'you'. The adverb 'no' means 'not'. The verb 'estas' means '[you] are'. The adverb 'aqui' means 'here'.
Viene comes from the root word venir, it means to come, to arrive, and to be.
"Quien viene a las nueve" means "who comes at nine."
"Quien viene a las diez" means "Who is coming at ten?" in English.
Alumnas aqui means "students here" in Spanish.
Se Vende Aqui means "for sale here" in Spanish.
IT MEANS... here she/it is (for female). For male would be "HELO AQUÍ"
"Aqui esta" means "here it is" in Spanish. It is used to indicate that something is being presented or provided to someone.
"que viene" literally means "that comes". When preceded by a day, month or the word year, it means "next" as in next month (El mes que viene). Next Tuesday (el martes que viene) As part of a sentence such as "el que viene tarde compra las bebidas" the meaning is "that comes" (the one that comes late buys the drinks)
There's an accent over the 'i' in aqui, and the 'a' in mas: aquí no más. It means "...here no more..."
Here we are. We are here. It means both.