Take Care of
"Cuidado" means "Careful!" "Cuidar" is the verb's infinitive. "Ciudad" is the word for "city".
The verb "necesitar" in Spanish means "to need."
It means "to pay close attention," "to take care [of]," "to look out for," "to be cautious," and to some degree, "to keep."
Lavar is the spanish verb for "to clean" so, lava, would be he/she/you (formal)/it cleans in present tense
"Escuchalos" is a Spanish verb that means "Listen to them."
The Spanish word for "care", meaning "to show concern or responsibility" is cuidado, the past participle of the verb cuidar.
Cuidar.
'to take care of'.
"Cuidado" means "Careful!" "Cuidar" is the verb's infinitive. "Ciudad" is the word for "city".
The verb "necesitar" in Spanish means "to need."
A fin de / para cuidar del bebé.
Se dice: Yo quiero cuidar de ti también puede ser: Te quiero cuidar Both expressions means the same.
There's an issue with this sentence. The second person familiar "Tu" (you) does not correspond with the second person formal "usted" (you) conjugation of the verb "ir" (to go). Either you mean to say, "Quien tu vas a cuidar?" (Who are you going to take care of?) –or– "Quien te va a cuidar?" (Who is going to take care of you?) Those are the translations for whatever your original sentence meant.
as far as I know, there is no chaver verb in spanish ...check the spelling
Verb in Spanish
It means "to pay close attention," "to take care [of]," "to look out for," "to be cautious," and to some degree, "to keep."
its a verb in spanish meaning to argue