It means you are a lazy child.
You say "How old are you?" in Yoruba language of the Western African origin as "Omo odun melo ni e?".
You can say "e 'olu'olu" in Hawaiian to mean "you're welcome."
In Hawaiian, "you're welcome" is typically expressed as "e' oli'oli."
I never heard of anyone using "heahea", but just 'a'ole pilikia would suffice, or even he mea 'ole. Welcome Heahea. There is no equivalent. one may say "komo mai". You are welcome, he mea 'ole No, "[e] komo mai" means "welcome", as in come in and make yourself at home. You don't say 'komo mai' in response to thank you.
Yes. The EA pair has a long E sound as in meat and bean. All uses of the word share the same pronunciation.Yes, the word mean has a long e sound. Often when you see an e and a together it is a clue the sound may be long e. There are some words where that is not true though, like bread and head.
You say "How old are you?" in Yoruba language of the Western African origin as "Omo odun melo ni e?".
ダニエル /da ni e ru/ is Japanization of that name.
You can say "e 'olu'olu" in Hawaiian to mean "you're welcome."
The phrase "watashi wa anata ni modotte e raremasu" is Japanese and translates to "I can return to you" or "I can come back to you." It expresses the ability or possibility of returning to someone. The phrase conveys a sense of longing or connection.
There is no English word "ole". If you come across it, it may be one of a number of things: 1 The Spanish word ole (with acute accent on the e), which is pronounced "olay" 2 A spelling of a dialectical pronounciation of "hole" by people who drop their aitches, particularly Cockneys. 3 A spelling of a dialectical pronounciation of "old" especially in the Southern Untied States.
MEANS: "Now I'm at home, and you? (are where? / what about you?)..." ima - now WA - is (I am) ie - home / house ni - inside (ni is used for other meanings but IE NI is IN HOME) imasu - I am / am (formal) ... anata WA - You Are(?) (Casual Japanese - and how about you can be just "...and you?") Cheers, E-2-J-BLOG
Its orriganally arabic but adopted by Spanish after 800 years of Arab rule in Spain, not sure on what it means though.
hell na that ni**a be crippin
of... = ...no to Las Vegas = Las Vegas -e- or -ni-
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According to forvo it is pronounced 'Ar mo ni e' , if so then: アーモニエ /aa mo ni e/ is its Japanese pronunciation and writing.
ʻOiaʻiʻo 'ole [o-e-ah e o o-lay] or [oy-ah e-o o-lay]