¿que pasó? (with the accent) means "what happened?" (from the preterite tense). although i think you probably mean "que pasa" (ending in an "a"). This means "what is happening?" (present tense) and you will hear it a lot. its like the English "what´s up"
hola, ¿que pasa? = hi, whats up/whats happening? Hola que paso is mostly used in California as a greeting for younger people.
Loosely speaking, this would be something like "What's up, baby?"
The English translation of the Spanish phrase "que pasa" is "what's up", or "how's it going". It is a relax way to introduce yourself and ask how someone is doing.
Hey whats up?
The literal translation is "the step"
The Spanish word paso means "step" in English.
The Spanish translation means in your step, this can be taken as in your footsteps.
Paso a paso means step by step.
step like in walking took a step = dio un paso
it translates to double step
step oak trees Answer If you meant Paso Dobles then translation is Two-Step, a form or dance style.
The literal translation is "the step"
The Spanish word paso means "step" in English.
The translation from Spanish is "fine step" and in Portuguese it's "pace fine" If that helped any.
The Spanish translation means in your step, this can be taken as in your footsteps.
Ya fue mi cumpleaños"mi cumpleaños paso", sounds too English."paso" is totally different from "pasó"
Actually, it means to 'yield the way', but we don't have such a linguistic convention in English. Instead, we say "to yield the right of way."
Ca is not a Spanish word. However it could be an informal contraction for "Cada". If that is the case "Cada Paso" means "Each step/pace" In spoken Spanish, especially in the Caribbean region the words Cada (each) and Para (for) are informally contracted as Ca' and Pa' especially if the following word starts with an a sound. It is always improper to write these words as contractions. Always write them out.
Paso a paso means step by step.
'Que paso' is spanish for 'what happened?' (often abbreviated as k paso)
Deborah Bender has written: 'Paso a paso' -- subject(s): Conversation and phrase books, Conversation and phrase books (for medical personnel), English, Spanish language