"The head" is a literal English equivalent of the Spanish phrase la cabeza. The feminine singular phrase may be literal, in reference to the top of a human body, or symbolic, in terms of the leader of a group. The pronunciation will be "la ka-VEY-sa" in Uruguayan Spanish.
In English, 'la talla' translates to 'clothing size' or 'measurement.'
The literal translation (from Spanish) is 'I just want the head'.
The Spanish term "La Plata" is translated into silver in English. It may also refer to the name of a port in East Argentina near the Rio, named La Plata.
A bit grammatically incorrect, but tú eres loco en la cabeza means "you're crazy in the head" and y tu pendejomeans "and you, dumba**"
The phrase "Cual es la fecha de hoy?" translates to "What is the date today?" in English.
to takefor example:Lleva a su hermana a la escuela. (Take your sister to school.)
"Body and head" is a literal English equivalent of the Spanish phrase cuerpo y cabeza. The phrase also may be found expressed as el cuerpo y la cabeza (literally, "the body and the head") since Spanish employs definite articles where English does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "KWER-po ee ka-VEY-sa" in Uruguayan Spanish.
La means "the" so la rosa is "the rose" when translated from Catalan, Italian or Spanish to English.
la oficina = the office
¿Qué es la historia? in Spanish is "What is the history?" in English.
The feminine singular word la in French, Italian and Spanish is "the" in English.
La cabeza.
"Salad" in Spanish is "la ensalada".
Translation: Me abrí la cabeza, or me quebré la cabeza
Translation: la noche
la cabeza :)
"Beauty is your head" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase La belleza es tu cabeza. The pronunciation of the feminine singular phrase in the third person singular -- which translates literally as "The beauty is your head" -- will be "la vey-SHEY-sa eh-stoo ka-VEY-sa" in Uruguay and "la vey-YEY-sa eh-stoo ka-VEY-sa" or "la vey-YEY-tha eh too ka-VEY-tha" in Spain.