january is hot
It literally translates to "to have heat". However, when it is used in a sentence, it describes something as "being hot". If it is 100 degrees outside, you could say, "Yo tengo calor" to say "I am hot". Or you can say "Tener calor" to describe the general outside temperature. If the dog is panting, you could say, "El perro tiene calor" to say that "The dog is hot".
"January" is "enero". Note that months are not capitalized in Spanish.
You should say either "Son muy caliente" or "son muy picante" depending on whether you are speaking of temperature or spiciness. "Caliente" is also used to refer to the physical appearance of persons.
It is how you express a date in Spanish. "Es el diez de enero de 2011" means "It is the 10th of January 2011." Note that the months are not capitalized in Spanish.
¿Que llevas cuando hace frío -- hace calor? What do you take with you when it's cold -- When it's hot? Literally: What you take when make cold -- make hot?
It's warm (as in the weather)
It should be hace mucho calor, meaning it is very hot (weather)
Que hace calor, que el sol está resplandeciente.
It's actually "hace calor", which means "It's hot."
Enero is the Spanish name for the month of January.
The word in spanish "enero" in English means January.
It literally translates to "to have heat". However, when it is used in a sentence, it describes something as "being hot". If it is 100 degrees outside, you could say, "Yo tengo calor" to say "I am hot". Or you can say "Tener calor" to describe the general outside temperature. If the dog is panting, you could say, "El perro tiene calor" to say that "The dog is hot".
The Latin noun calor can mean heat, warmth, passion, zeal, ardour or love.
It means: What months of the year is it hot?
If you mean "hace años", that's Spanish for "years ago". If you mean it as written, i.e. "hace anos", that's Spanish for "he makes anuses".
Como = How (with accent on o) Hacer = temperature calor = hot how hot is the temperature? <3
"Hace" can mean "ago." For example, the phrase "hace dos días" translates to "two days ago." However, it can also be the conjugated form of "hacer" in the present tense. "Hacer" means "to do" or "to make" so it changes to "hace" when used to describe a singular person other than yourself or that person you're talking to. (used for él, ella, or usted)... Another way it can be used is to describe the temperature/ weather. The statement "it is hot" is "hace calor"