It literally means "Don't tell me."
But is most often used as an expression meaning something like "You don't say!" or "I don't believe it!".
No digas eso= Don't say that! eso yo nunca haría= I didn't do that!
DIGAS comes from the verb "decir" which means "to say/to tell".DIGAS is either a present subjunctive or a negative imperative (negative command). Both take the same conjugation (although the "I" form is never used as an imperative).The conjugation is as follows:yodiga (I)túdigas (you)él, ella, Usteddiga (he/ she/ it/ you formal)nosotrosdigamos (we)vosotrosdigáis (you plural)ellos, ellas, ustedesdigan (they/ you plural formal)DIGAS can be used for two reasons:1) PRESENT SUBJUNCTIVE:To express an element of uncertainty.e.g. "Quiero que me lo DIGAS." - "I want you to tell me."(I want you to, but I'm not certain that you will.)"Espero que no le DIGAS nada" - "I hope you don't say anything to him (Again: I hope you wont say anything, but I don't know if you will.)2) NEGATIVE IMPERATIVE:To command somebody NOT to do something.e.g. "No DIGAS eso a tu madre." - "Don't say that to your mother/Don't tell your mother that.""¡No me DIGAS!" - "I don't believe it!" (literally means "Don't tell me!")
a translation of a spanish word to English
Live is not a Spanish word, but the phrase means "live more".
The phrase "de nada" is an interjection. It is used in the US to mean "you're welcome". This is also the Spanish translation for the same phrase.
Nunca digas como te sientes.
No digas eso= Don't say that! eso yo nunca haría= I didn't do that!
I will assume you mean "What is 'can you write in Spanish?' translated into Spanish". The phrase in Spanish is "¿Puedes escribir en español?".
Quiero que diga / digan / digas / digáis algo
what does the Latin phrase ''Si Hoc'' mean
DIGAS comes from the verb "decir" which means "to say/to tell".DIGAS is either a present subjunctive or a negative imperative (negative command). Both take the same conjugation (although the "I" form is never used as an imperative).The conjugation is as follows:yodiga (I)túdigas (you)él, ella, Usteddiga (he/ she/ it/ you formal)nosotrosdigamos (we)vosotrosdigáis (you plural)ellos, ellas, ustedesdigan (they/ you plural formal)DIGAS can be used for two reasons:1) PRESENT SUBJUNCTIVE:To express an element of uncertainty.e.g. "Quiero que me lo DIGAS." - "I want you to tell me."(I want you to, but I'm not certain that you will.)"Espero que no le DIGAS nada" - "I hope you don't say anything to him (Again: I hope you wont say anything, but I don't know if you will.)2) NEGATIVE IMPERATIVE:To command somebody NOT to do something.e.g. "No DIGAS eso a tu madre." - "Don't say that to your mother/Don't tell your mother that.""¡No me DIGAS!" - "I don't believe it!" (literally means "Don't tell me!")
Es medianoche is a Spanish phrase that means It's midnight.
The Spanish phrase "te amo" translates to "I love you" in English.
hand in hand
yours, loveamo (spanish)
a magnet
a translation of a spanish word to English