What thing.-literally translates
however it is a saying in "mexican spanish" meaning like "wow" or "unbelieveable"
La primera cosa que hice
It depends on how you mean it.If it is simply a part of a sentence, it would "Cualquiera cosa". For example: "I want whatever he's eating." is "Yo quiero cualquiera cosa que él come."If you mean it as an interjection to dismiss what the other person is saying, it would be, "Sea lo que sea".
Tener que = "to have to".
The thing that wakes you up in the morning.
'What does what?' = 'Que hace que?' (with accents on the 'e' in 'que')
La primera cosa que hice
In Spanish, you would say "¿Cuál es tu cosa favorita?" to ask someone what their favorite thing is.
¿Qué es la primera cosa que haces cuando levantarse?
This means something prettier than you
" quel" <-- There is no such word in Spanish!., do you mean "que"? - "que" is "what".
It depends on how you mean it.If it is simply a part of a sentence, it would "Cualquiera cosa". For example: "I want whatever he's eating." is "Yo quiero cualquiera cosa que él come."If you mean it as an interjection to dismiss what the other person is saying, it would be, "Sea lo que sea".
la cosa i know cause i have a spanish book right here with me.
hijo recuerda dios en cada cosa que tu haces
de que: from what
Tener que = "to have to".
la siguiente cosa que hice era el baloncesto de juego
Literally, it means, "What thing?" But it can be interpreted as "Huh?" "What's the meaning of this?" "What's going on here?" Even "What's this little doohickey? is a fair interpretation of this catch-all Spanish expression of surprise and behind-the-curvedness.What did you mean:Que cosa --- may he sew / I told that you sew.¿Qué cosa? --- What? / What did /do you say?¡Qué cosa! --- roundabout ¡What's going on here! / What a thing!