point (v) = apuntar; point (n) = punto
punto, so point of view would be 'punto de vista'
One point five in Spanish is uno punto cinco.
Paige. Say it normally but in a spanish accent. names do not normally change in languages. hope this helped. please add me for a trust point! Em
Angela. Say this name normally but in a spanish accent! Please add a trust point to my name! Thanks! Em.
Sister in law in Spanish is cunada.
How to say "hi" in spanish is Hola. How to say "bye" in spanish is Adios.
bolígrafo
Punto clave
One point five in Spanish is uno punto cinco.
point (v) = apuntar; point (n) = puntopunto, so point of view would be 'punto de vista'
I dont know if its exactly how someone fluent in spanish would say it, but "Jadyn es el mejor" should get the point across.
noventa y ocho (punto) ocho
Because Power Point is a proper noun referring to a product, you would actually just say "Power Point." Translating it would mean something else entirely. To say a "Power Point presentation," you would say "presentación en Power Point."
Julain. Say this name normally but in a spanish accent! Please add a trust point to my name! Thanks! Em.
Paige. Say it normally but in a spanish accent. names do not normally change in languages. hope this helped. please add me for a trust point! Em
Literally is "Aspecto", but in some cases you could say "Punto de vista" (point of view)
If you are refering to the MS app, the answer is "Power Point" as in english, but the literal translation is "punto de fuerza"
Angela. Say this name normally but in a spanish accent! Please add a trust point to my name! Thanks! Em.