"They drink milk" = "que beben leche"
"Necesita tomar leche"
The Spanish word for milk is leche (pronounced lay-chay).
"My cat needs to drink milk" in Spanish is: "Mi gato debe tomar leche" (Latin American Spanish) or "Mi gato debe beber leche" (Mexican or European Spanish)."Your cat needs to drink milk" is "Su gato debe tomar leche" or "Su gato debe beber leche."
You say, "Tomo la leche." 'Beber' in Spanish means 'to drink' but I've found that in Hispanoamerica, 'tomar' is used much more frequently to mean 'to drink.'
bebida
Yes. Yes you can.
Drink lots of milk
In spanish the phrase "drink up" is beber hasta. This is a different language.
With this trick question, most people will say "Milk," (which is not true) just for the fun of the questioner catching the questionee off guard. Cows drink water, not milk.
That just depends on each individual.
It depends on the context. Here are some possible sentences: 1. I'm going to drink a cup of milk. 2. I'm going to drink milk. 3. I'm going to drink some milk. They are all correct. Number 2 implies that the speaker has chosen milk as opposed to another drink ("You're having a cup of tea, but I'm going to drink milk.") Put it in a sippy cup and drink it like a man
Well only mammals get milk from their moms so i have to say no on that one.