present indicative is the regular present tense in Spanish. ex: I talk. (yo hablo)
The "squiggly line" over the n in "señor" (~) is called a tilde, a type of diacritical mark. In Spanish, the ñ is a separate letter of the Spanish alphabet, with a different pronunciation from a regular n. The Spanish ñ has a "ny" sound, while the Spanish regular n is pronounced much the same as in English.
what does domino mean in spanish
In Spanish it does not mean anything.
Bestia means Beast except in spanish :)
"regula" isn't a word in Spanish. Did you mean: regalo (gift) regular (regular, or to regulate) regla (rule)
I am regular/methodical/orderly I am middling, so-so
This is an onomatopoeia, not a regular word on any language.
present indicative is the regular present tense in Spanish. ex: I talk. (yo hablo)
There is no such word in Spanish. If you mean to translate from English to Spanish, in Spanish that is "padre" (the same as the regular meaning of "father").
regular = regular
The "squiggly line" over the n in "señor" (~) is called a tilde, a type of diacritical mark. In Spanish, the ñ is a separate letter of the Spanish alphabet, with a different pronunciation from a regular n. The Spanish ñ has a "ny" sound, while the Spanish regular n is pronounced much the same as in English.
They mean 'sindicatos' in Spanish. A sindicato in Spain functions along the same lines as a union in the US. But the Spanish sindicatos are much more vigorous and regular in their persuit of social justice and economic parity or equality than US unions.
If you ask a person how they are doing and they say "Regular" that means the same as saying "OK".
they speak the regular spanish except some put and accent to some of the words for example regular spanish for wait is "esperate" and they say "perate" and instead of you in regular spanish "tu" they say "vos" that's pretty much the only difference the languages have.
what does regular income mean
what does domino mean in spanish