"Don Patrón" translates to "Mr. Boss" or "Mr. Patron" in English. The term "Don" is a Spanish honorific used to show respect, often for older men or those in authority, while "Patrón" refers to a boss or a person in charge. Together, it conveys a sense of respect for someone in a leadership position.
the boss is in charge here
There is no patron saint of the English language.
"Swydd y Dyn" translates to "Job of the Man" in English.
Okyakusan i think you mean from English to Japaneseパトロン Patoron 保護者 Hogo-sha
Patron in french is the same thing as it is in english.
It can mean either Boss or Pattern. "A completion, it means "The boss" if you write "El Patron" and "model" if you write "El patron" , I'm not at all a spanish speaker but this is how google translates works :) ... "
don`t let go of the patato
The English translation of mi patron is my employer
patron
boss
It means bullying.Someone say to his/her friends "Don`t talk to him/her" It means bullying.Someone say to his/her friends "Don`t talk to him/her"
'No hablas ingles' means 'You don`t (or, if a question, 'Don't you') speak English' 'No hables ingles' is a subjunctive, meaning 'Don't speak English'