algo
In Spanish, you don't say "I am hungry", but rather "I have hunger". So the phrase would be "Abuela, tengo hambre".
To say, "It looks' in Spanish takes 3 syllables. In English, when you're expressing disgust, the shorter, the more impactful. So it is in Spanish. So rather than say, "It looks," a Spanish speaker would simply say, "EW! How ugly!" And they would say it, ¡Ay! ¡Que feo/a! (depending on whether the thing/person/etc. is masculine or feminine).
Sister in law in Spanish is cunada.
How to say "hi" in spanish is Hola. How to say "bye" in spanish is Adios.
you say it in spanish as- sarina
Prefiero estar afuera
Bastante bien, cariño.
In Spanish, you don't say "I am hungry", but rather "I have hunger". So the phrase would be "Abuela, tengo hambre".
Prefiero venir solo
Yo te prefiero ver feliz.
Prefiero hablarlo con tigo en espanol
'take in' is rather ambiguous. Please specify more clearly.
California is written the same in Spanish as it is in English. There is a slight difference in pronunciation. The "Ca" part is pronounced "Cah" in Spanish, rather than the way it is said in English, which is to say "Cal" which rhymes with "gal."
Vamos a ir a comer. That is a direct translation and it is grammatically correct. However it is rather clumsy both in English and Spanish.
To say, "It looks' in Spanish takes 3 syllables. In English, when you're expressing disgust, the shorter, the more impactful. So it is in Spanish. So rather than say, "It looks," a Spanish speaker would simply say, "EW! How ugly!" And they would say it, ¡Ay! ¡Que feo/a! (depending on whether the thing/person/etc. is masculine or feminine).
Fiore means FLOWER but in Italian, not Spanish. The Spanish word for flower is FLOR, but you don't say "el flor" but rather, LA FLOR. Flowers are feminine.
Fiore means FLOWER but in Italian, not Spanish. The Spanish word for flower is FLOR, but you don't say "el flor" but rather, LA FLOR. Flowers are feminine.