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1) Doesn't = no

He doesn't speak English - No habla inglés.

She doesn't like cake - No le gusta pastel.

It doesn't rain much - No llueve mucho.

2) Doesn't = verdad ,as tag question.

He speaks English, doesn't he? - Habla inglés, verdad?

She likes cake, doesn't she? - Le gusta pastel, verdad?

It rains alot, doesn't it? - Llueve mucho, verdad?

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Wiki User

15y ago
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Wiki User

12y ago
No.

En castellano, por herencia del latín, el verbo puede conjugarse de tal manera que indique tiempo, modo, persona e incluso género; lo cual no acontece en inglés, puesto que este idioma, para las conjugaciones verbales, se apoya de auxiliares que en castellano serían sufijos.

Verbi gratia:

No vienes --- you don't come
Os di ---- I will tell you.
No vinieron (ustedes) ---- You didn't come.

De esto deviene que en inglés, el verbo casi siempre se muestre indeclinable, y que por tanto, se haga mención excesiva del pronombre personal, pues el verbo por sí solo no se da abasto para indicar de quién se habla, en qué modo; a veces en qué tiempo o en qué género.

English Answer (Translation)

No.


In Castilian Spanish, because of its Latin heritage, the verb can be conjugated in such a way that it shows time, mode, person, and even gender; which does not happen in English, given that this language [English], in treating the conjugation of verbs, relies on auxiliary verbs that would be suffixes in Castilian.

Examples:

No vienes --- you don't come
Os diré ---- I will tell you.
No vinieron (ustedes) ---- You didn't come.

From this it happens that in English, the verb might almost always be shown indeclinable, and therefore, excessive mention [use] of the personal pronoun is made, so the verb all by itself does not give support for indicating of whom it is speaking, in what mode; sometimes in what time or in what gender.

In Spanish, for each person in the conjugation, there is a separate conjugation of the verb. By adding the word 'no' before the verb (in the past tense) you are effectively saying didn't. That's why the first answer begins with, "No."
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16y ago

"Didn't" is not a word by itself in Spanish. It is the word "no" followed by whatever the verb is. Such is "No lo hice." means "I didn't do it."

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Wiki User

15y ago

"Do not use" in Spanish is "no se usa." It is pronounced, "no say OO-sah." Sites such as learn-spanish.co.il provide audio pronunciations of many common Spanish words.

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Wiki User

10y ago

Spanish signs say "No Entre" (do not enter).

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Wiki User

15y ago

English: "don't" Spanish or Espanol: "no haga"

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Wiki User

15y ago

Do not = "no". Do not speak = No hables (is just "no" in this case).

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Wiki User

8y ago

To say you do not speak spanish you would say: No habló español.

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Wiki User

15y ago

You say "did not" in spanish as "no".

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Anonymous

Lvl 1
3y ago

Cool guy

Man

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Q: How do you spell Do not use in Spanish?
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