Cool is an English equivalent of the Spanish masculine adjective 'fresco' in terms of drinks and weather. Fresh is an equivalent in terms of foods such as fish and fruits. Latest is its equivalent in terms of news. Nervy or calm and collected is the equivalent in terms of colloquial uses of 'fresh' in English. And wet is the equivalent in terms of paint.
No. "Fresco" has several meanings, but "nude" is not one of them. Among other things, "fresco" is a certain painting technique. In Spanish, the word means "fresh".
a translation of a spanish word to English
alico is not a Spanish word.
quest is not a Spanish word.
The translation of the Spanish word "callejero or callejera" is an adjective in the Spanish language that translates into the English word to mean "street".
fresh, cool, recently-arrived 'estar/quedar fresco' = to fail, be disappointed 'quedarse fresco' =to act coolly,without scruple.
Al fresco dining in Italian and Spanish means dining "outside" in English.
"fresco"is the spanish word for cool ..
"The fresh air" and "the freshly laid lime plaster mural painting" are two English equivalents of the Spanish phrase el fresco. Context makes clear which meaning suits. The pronunciation will be "el FREY-sko" in Uruguayan Spanish.
"In jail" or "in the fresh air" and "in the fresh air" or "in the fresco (painting)" are respective English equivalents of the Italian and Spanish phrase al fresco. Context makes clear whether an Italian language speaker references to jail time or the outdoors (cases 1, 2) or a Spanish language speaker refers to outdoor happenings or painting styles (examples 3, 4). The pronunciation will be "al FREY-sko" in Italian and Spanish.
No. "Fresco" has several meanings, but "nude" is not one of them. Among other things, "fresco" is a certain painting technique. In Spanish, the word means "fresh".
the word that is the same in English and spanish is the word "no".
nide is not an English word or a Spanish word.
"The fresh air" is a literal English equivalent of the Spanish phrase el aire fresco.Specifically, the masculine singular definite article el is "the." The masculine noun aire means "air" in this context. The masculine adjective fresco translates as "fresh."The pronunciation will be "eh-LEYE-rey FREY-sko" in Spanish.
fresco/a
fresco/a
The English word for "dice" in Spanish is "says."