To say, 'the cocktail hour', you say, "La hora del cóctel."
Hora Feliz.
Una hora y veinte minutos
The Spanish word for half is media (sounds like may-dia). When used in telling the time to just say half hour one could say media hora. The literal translation to a spanish ear would be "half hour". It is more commonly used like this "dos y media" which means 2:30 or two and half. The word "a" (a half) is never used this way.
hora
There is no o'clock in Spanish. It's a totally English artifact. Spanish doesn't have it. French doesn't have it. German doesn't have it. Hebrew doesn't have it. Japanese doesn't have it. Greek doesn't have it. No doubt, the list goes on. Most languages treat time telling like this: Question - "What hour is it?" or "What is the hour?" Answer - "It is (they are) XX hour."Some languages leave off the 'hour' part of the answer (Spanish, for one) because once you know you're talking about the time, 'hour' is implied.For a time of 1 o'clock (plus or minus 29 minutes), it is simply "es la una..."For other hours, it is "son las.." followed by the hour number, plus or minus minutes.
¿Se puede tomar un cóctel por favor? would be the best way to say "Can you have a cocktail please?" in Spanish.
"The hour" is "la hora".
Hora Feliz.
El Hours
Tres hora
It usually means that the bride and groom are having photos taken after the service.
A cocktail dress is 'une robe de cocktail' in French.
You say: medio pasado una hora
Translation: The Cocktail
Estudio una hora.
Hubers in Portland Oregon
Could you maybe be thinking of sangria? Its like a red win/fruit cocktail type drink.