well it's in spanish already, but in English it means something like "I'm going to punch your lights out" or a BIG punch, there's no literal or expression-wise translation
"Ver" is the spanish ver "to see." Pronto is the word for "soon." "You" is not a Spanish word. "Te veo pronto" would be "I'll see you soon." "Nos vemos pronto" is "We'll see each other soon."
"Ver" translates to "see" or "watch" in English. It is a verb used to indicate the action of looking at something or observing it visually.
"contigo" is the missing Spanish word. The sentence would be "Quiero ver una película contigo. Voy al cine." which means "I want to watch a movie with you. I'm going to the cinema."
we will see again. Volver means "to go back/ return" Volver conjugate with us and it becomes volvemos. However it has a -re attached so it becomes volveremos which is the future tense. So volveremos = we will go back. a = to ver = see volveremos (We will go back) a (to) ver(see) = we will go back to see. However, if the phrase becomes "nos volveremos a ver" the meaning slightly change to "we will see each other again".
The root ver means to see. This is shown in the word visible.
to see
Ver means 'to see' in English.
Yes.
"Ver la tele" means "To watch T.V."
Ver la película vieja - To watch the old movie.
The word yo in Spanish refers to I, meaning me. When conjugated, yo becomes ver.
"Ver" is the spanish ver "to see." Pronto is the word for "soon." "You" is not a Spanish word. "Te veo pronto" would be "I'll see you soon." "Nos vemos pronto" is "We'll see each other soon."
hagar is not a Spanish word, so it means: "hagar here to see"
If it is asked as a question, it means "Can I see?" If it is not a question, it means "I can see."
to see
Ver
"Ver"