if you do not speak the money does not speak my language
No hablo inglés.
The phrase "tu habla espanol dulce yo habla espanol tambien te amo" is a mix of Spanish and incorrect grammar. The correct version would be "Tú hablas español dulce, yo también hablo español. Te amo." This translates to "You speak sweet Spanish, I also speak Spanish. I love you."
dinero = money
I am guessing you mea "se habla", not "sa habla". If I am correct it meas spoken. One example is "Se habla epañol aqui." translates to "Spanish spoken here." or "We speak Spanish here."
Quien = who? you is English; 'yo' isSpanosh for 'I' habla = you(formal, singular)/he/she/speaks 'De quien yo hablo' would mean 'of whom I speak'
If you mean 'What language(s) do you speak, then?' 'Pues, cual(es) idioma(s) habla usted/hablas tu?' (Plural) (formal/informal)
I speak the language of loooove
"Veo que usted habla mi idioma" means "I see that you speak my language", as a formal statement.
hablas (pronounced ablas) is a conjugated form of hablar (ablar). hablar means 'to speak' and hablas means 'you speak'.
roughly: you never talk to me/speak with me. better phrasing would be: nunca hablas conmigo.
The question in English means: "What language do you speak?"
Translation: You're speaking Spanish tonight.
¡Habla conmigo, tú! Notice that this is the second person imperative, or command, tense. Said as a simple statement "You talk to me", it would be "Hablas conmigo".
No hablo inglés.
"Hablas ingles" means "Do you speak English?" in Spanish.
The phrase "tu habla espanol dulce yo habla espanol tambien te amo" is a mix of Spanish and incorrect grammar. The correct version would be "Tú hablas español dulce, yo también hablo español. Te amo." This translates to "You speak sweet Spanish, I also speak Spanish. I love you."
quien habla: who speaks