He came alone
"Vino en" can mean either "wine in" or "he (or she) came in," but it would not be the end of the sentence in Spanish.
If it is "no solo español", it means "not only Spanish". "No sólo español" is "not just Spanish" or "Not only Spanish".
I only speak Spanish.
vine: past of venir: I came. (not to be confused with vino, which is wine.)
Dos copas grandes de vino Dos vasos grandes de vino In Spanish, people drink wine in "copas", not "vasos".
"Vino en" can mean either "wine in" or "he (or she) came in," but it would not be the end of the sentence in Spanish.
solo in Spanish means that you are alone
"Solo español" is Spanish for "Only Spanish"
"Vino" is a Spanish equivalent of "wine."The Spanish word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is "el" ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is "un" ("a, one").The pronunciation is "ehl BEE-noh."
veino isn't a word. but vino means wine
If it is "no solo español", it means "not only Spanish". "No sólo español" is "not just Spanish" or "Not only Spanish".
Vino is wine in Spanish.
It means all the following: You [formal] didn't come. He didn't come. She didn't come. ...no wine...
I only speak Spanish.
Vino
no
Vino rojo ( despues viene la marca mean ( after come the brand)