That's Correct!
In Spanish, "¿Qué es eso?" translates to "What is that?" It is a common question used to inquire about something unfamiliar or unknown.
It means "That is not true."
You need context to answer the question, but it is either "está" or "es".
"¿Dónde es eso?" translates to "Where is that?" in English.
"Es lunes" is Spanish for "It's Monday".
Contestame
it's quien eso es?--- it means who is that?----eso es---means that is---you could say eso es quien? which means that is who?
As written, it is "What that in Spanish". It is missing a verb. "¿Qué es eso en español?" would be "What is that in Spanish?"
eso es = it is
Many options: "Eso es todo amigos", or "Eso es todo camaradas"
"Eso es lo que pasa", for "that's what's happening". If you mean literally "up" as in "Upstairs" or "overhead", "Eso es lo que está arriba".
It's Italian for 'It's all that'. In Spanish: 'Es todo eso'
Usually translates a "that's so". "Eso sí que es" is how you spell "socks" in English or how you say "absolutely so" in Spanish.
Que es eso means 'what is that'.
There is no language called "Mexican". Most Mexicans speak Spanish. Translation (to Spanish): Ahora, eso es poderoso. -OR- Ahora, eso es capaz. It depends on how you mean "powerful".
You could say "Eso es lo que pasa". If you literally mean "That is the direction of up", then you could say " Eso es arriba".
If you mean "sweet" as in a flavor, "eso es dulce" or perhaps "Que dulce". If you mean something that is caring or emotional, perhaps "Eso es precioso/a", "que amable", "es mono/a", "es suave", or "es rico/a"