Translation: ¿A qué hora vas a acostarte? (Informal)
¿A qué hora va a acostarse? (Formal)
¿A qué hora puedo venir mañana?
siente:threinta
Me voy a dormir a las
It could be "que tal" that stands for "How are you/how is going/what is up"
yo voy a ir a recojer a john= I am going to pick up John tu vas/usted va a ir a recojer a Juan = You (informal/polite) are going to pick up John (with John's name hispanified)
I grew up is "crecí." It is pronounced "cray-SEE." You can find Spanish translations for individual words by going to ask.com and typing in the words "English to Spanish" without the quotation marks and a box will show for you to type your word in that you want translated.
It depends on how you are going to use it. Seguimiento means follow up, as in following something. Carta recordativa is used a written follow up. Siga means to follow. Seguir means follow, as in continuing to follow.
It is not Spanish, but Italian; the Spanish would be te callas. It translates to: Shut up or shut it or you shut up.
"Until tomorrow!" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase ¡Hasta mañana! The prepositional phrase also translates as "Til tomorrow," "Till tomorrow" or "Up to tomorrow" in English. The pronunciation will be "A-sta ma-NYA-na" in Uruguayan Spanish.
I was never going with Sue. So I can not break up with her.
Evergreen Energy EEE
tomorrow lucky numbers
subiendo
Tomorrow might not be as we thought. Who knows, we might die Tomorrow!
Yes i have thought that ever since i met them
Some similar phrases in spanish are: ¿Cómo va? (how are you going, i.e. how are things going) ¿Qué tal? (what such? or how's it going, used similarly to "what's up?")
"Manana mi amiga" means "tomorrow my friend" in Spanish. It is a phrase used to express that you will see or meet up with your friend the next day.
"a" means "to" in Spanish. "para" means "in order to" in Spanish.
A quantitative prediction is a prediction of a specific quantity of something, for example, if I say it is going to rain tomorrow that is not quantitative, but if I say there will be an inch of rain falling tomorrow, that is quantitative. If I say the stock market will be up tomorrow, that is not quantitative, but if I say the stock market will be up by 50 points tomorrow, that is quantitative.
Spanish people tend to wake up around 7-8 am on weekdays, but it can vary depending on personal schedules and work commitments. On weekends, they may sleep in a bit later, waking up around 9-10 am.