The (female) professor is always tired.
It means ''professor'' (female)
It means "I listen to the professor (female)".
En la pizarra
Please check the ortografy to give sense to the sentence, I'll try with this one: Claro que no. Of course not. No te gusta la playa? Don't you like the beach? No, voy a la playa siempre. No, I always go to the beach. No voy a la playa siempre. I don't always go to the beach.
La Cansanda is "tired" in English. ex: "yo estoy muy cansada." it means "I am very tired."
La profesora es... *and you insert her name here*
I am at home and tired.
the girl is tired
"¿De dónde es la profesora?" in Spanish means "Where is the teacher from?"
Yes, the Spanish phrase "la profesora" contains a feminine noun.Specifically, the feminine singular definite article "la" means "the." The feminine noun "profesora" means "(female) professor." The pronunciation is "lah PROH-feh-SOH-rah."
Puedo responder "Sí, hice mis tareas y se las entregaré a la profesora".
It means ''professor'' (female)
The teacher. (feminine)
teacher (feminine)
who is the professor
Translates to English to mean what do you call the teacher?
Me gusta mucho el español. Estoy en español II. La profesora es la Sra Mcintyre.