"Mira, mira, VEN aqui" " look, look, come here"
Look, Look, come here.
Look, come here
To say come here girl in Spanish you would say, ven aqui, chica. You could say come here boy by saying ven aqui, chico.
ven acá" Ven aquí "- source -Google Translate.
ven aqui papi
Come over here ---------------------- Ven aqui
In the formal, there is no distinction made between negative and positive commands. In the informal, it DOES make a difference. Example: the verb venir. Formal command is venga. ¡Venga aqui ahora mismo! - Come here right now! ¡No venga aqui ahora mismo! - Don´t come here right now! In the Informal, positive, the word is "ven". ¡Ven aqui ahora mismo! The negative would be "no vengas." ¡No vengas aqui ahora mismo! - Don´t come here right now!
"look look come here"
To say come here girl in Spanish you would say, ven aqui, chica. You could say come here boy by saying ven aqui, chico.
"Ben aqui" is not a Spanish phrase. It could be a misspelling or a mix of languages. "Bien aquí" means "well here" in Spanish.
It's TWO Spanish words: ven = come (present subjunctive 'you') aqui = here So the phrase means 'Come here'
The Spanish command "Ven aquí." means "Come here." in English.
aca/aqui means here. alla/alli means there. ven aca/aqui = come here vayate alla/alli = go over there
Venga aqui. More often"Ven aqui", which is the familiar command form.
Ven aqui por favor.
ven acá" Ven aquí "- source -Google Translate.
Ven aquí, Linda is a Spanish equivalent of 'Come here, Beautiful'. The imperative 'ven' means '[you] come'. The adverb 'aquí' means 'here'. The feminine adjective 'linda' means 'beautiful'. All together, it's pronounced 'BEH-nah-KEE LEEN-dah'.
ven aqui papi
Come over here ---------------------- Ven aqui