lavarse las manos
please - favor de
must - deben
Lavar
How to say "put your hands up" in spanish is PUT YOUR HANDS UP (i do not no why but that is how haha) hope that helped!
It literally means, "Wash you[rself] the hands." But it's interpreted simply as, "Wash your hands."
And here hard hands is said- y aquí las manos duras
'A verb is reflexive' = 'un verbo es reflexivo'. What it means, is that (generally, in English as well as Spanish and other languages) a verb is accompanied by '(my/your/him/her/its)self' or '(our/your/their)selves'; (or the equivalent so-called 'reflexive pronoun(s)' in other languages. In Spanish, 'me/te/se/le/nos/os/les'). E.g. I wash the windows = Lavo las ventanas I wash myself/you wash yourself, etc. = me lavo/te lavas, etc. In Spanish you also use the reflexive if you say 'I wash my hands' = me lavo las manos (literally: I wash myself the hands).
"Lava sus manos" means "wash your hands" in Spanish.
Lavar
洗手 (xi3 shou3 in Mandarin - Pinyin pronunciation) 洗 = wash 手 = hand
How to say "put your hands up" in spanish is PUT YOUR HANDS UP (i do not no why but that is how haha) hope that helped!
wash your hands :)
Wash your hands : eghsel edeik or yadayk ( in Arabic ). written as : اغسل يديك
Lavarse los dientes. In Spanish you don't brush our teeth, you wash them.
Lavar ropa.
Lavarse los dientes. In Spanish you don't brush our teeth, you wash them.
It is supposed to be wash their hands not your hands because that wiuld be weird having someone wash your hands for you.
French: mains Hebrew: ידיים (yadayim) Hungarian: kezek Italian: mani Japanese: 手 spanish: manos
It literally means, "Wash you[rself] the hands." But it's interpreted simply as, "Wash your hands."