'You' is English.
Me llamo Trisha = My name is Trisha
My Name = Mi nombre (Me llamo ___ = Call me ___ ) e.g. My name is Anna = Me llamo Anna
Hola, me llamo Alejandro is Spanish for Hello, my name is Alexander.
this is a usual response used when a telephone is implied: te llamo is I'll call you.
Hola, soy Samantha. Or you could say: Hola, me llamo Samantha. That basically means "Hi, my name is Samantha" (literally, "Hi, I call myself Samantha").
'Hola,mi llamo Megan'. Hola, me llamo Megan
My Name = Mi nombre (Me llamo ___ = Call me ___ ) e.g. My name is Anna = Me llamo Anna
The Spanish words yo llamo = I callyo me llamo = I call myselfTo say 'my name is Jose' you just say: me llamo Jose
"My name is...."
yo me llamo
I think you mean: yo me llamo zenaida= which means my name is zenaida
This means "My name is Joe". Me llamo is a way to say "My name is..."
Me llamo es... llamo is pronounced yaaamo
Hola (hello) Me llamo (my name is) Mary Hola = or la Me llamo = may yamoe
llamo means calling, so I assume it means am calling.
Me llamo...(your name) As in Como te llamas?? Me llamo Alexander.
you say llamo for boys [[chicos]] and llama [[for girls]]. If you want it to be pural then add an "s" like llamos and llamas. Ex. Me llamo Link your welcome =]], ray of sunshinex3 __________________________________________________________ I disagree. "Llamo" is the first person singular (yo) form of the verb, so it's always llamo. Me llamo Juan or Me llamo Ana. "Llama" is third person singular- he or she calls. Se llama Juan or Se llama Ana. The o vs. a ending is for adjectives (describing words), not verbs.
this is a usual response used when a telephone is implied: te llamo is I'll call you.