You are wrong with me.
"Donde estas tu" is Spanish for "where are you?" It is a question asking about someone's current location.
The way it's written, it means, "...because you're not talking with me." But if the word(s) were written 'Por qué,' with a space between the 'por' and 'qué,' the sentence would then read, "Why aren't you talking with me?"
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'.
you are and you hate youtu eres y no tu gusta contigo?tu eres y tu desgusta contigo?you are and you hate me.tu eres y no tu gusta conmigo?tu eres y tu desgusta conmigo?
"Hallo tu estas vivo" is a combination of different languages and phrases. "Hallo" is a German greeting meaning "hello," "tu" is Spanish for "you," and "estas vivo" is Spanish for "you are alive." So, the phrase could mean something like "hello, you are alive" or "hello, are you alive?" depending on the context. However, the phrase is not a common or standard expression in any specific language.
"You are lost."
you are demented
You are well brave with me
tu estas muy buena means that your hot in other words DAM MAM YOU LOOK GOOD
This is an incomplete statement that means When you are
'tu estas' (with an accent on the 'a') = 'you are'
It should say tu "estas" enfermo, which means you are sick.
Tu Mal was created in 2003.
That means "You are in....."Tú estás en = You are in/on
Because your not talking to me
"If you are." (If it's "si") "Yes, you are." (If it's "sí")
Properly "¿Cómo está tu madre?" and means "How is your mother?"