The English equivalents of the Portuguese and Spanish words 'te' and 'nada' are the following: 'te', which is the direct object form of the second person pronoun, is 'you'; and 'nada', which is the third person form of the verb 'nadar', is '[he/she/it] swims'. But the verb doesn't take a direct object in Portuguese, or in Spanish. And so the phrase instead must be 'de nada', which may be an answer to being thanked. For it's the equivalent of the English 'You're welcome', 'No problem', 'It's no problem', or 'Don't mention it'.
De Nada is Spanish, not Welsh. It means "you're welcome" or "it's nothing".
It means "You are welcome beautiful woman."
De nada means thank you. Que haces means what are you doing?
DE nada means "you're welcome" or "no problem" in Spanish. It is translated literally as "of nothing." however, d nada I am not sure of.
If you mean You are welcome, it is 'De nada'
De nada. De nada.
De Nada is Spanish, not Welsh. It means "you're welcome" or "it's nothing".
For nothing
It means "You are welcome beautiful woman."
De nada means thank you. Que haces means what are you doing?
DE nada means "you're welcome" or "no problem" in Spanish. It is translated literally as "of nothing." however, d nada I am not sure of.
It is 'de nada' and would mean "you're welcome" (replied after given some thanks)
Nada means 'Nothing'. De donde eres? is the informal way of saying 'Where are you from?'
If you mean You are welcome, it is 'De nada'
yes
In Brazilian Portuguese, you can say "De nada" or "Por nada" to mean 'You are welcome'.
"Y de nada" is a phrase in Spanish that translates to "and you're welcome" in English. It is commonly used as a response to "gracias" (thank you) to acknowledge gratitude.