guerrilla
"Said" comes from the verb "decir", which is irregular. He/she/you/a person's name said= dijo I said=dije They said=dijeron
a mean person is persona mala person is persona
A person speaking Spanish would say "Loren" because that is a person's name. The Spanish equivalent to Lauren or Loren is "Laura" pronounced lau-ra.
Karina is a person's name, and would remain the same in Spanish.
Shalaya is not a Spanish word and therefore has no meaning in Spanish. If "Shalaya" is a person's name, please use it in Spanish without translation.
They are querrillas
Conscientious objectors
Pacifist
"Said" comes from the verb "decir", which is irregular. He/she/you/a person's name said= dijo I said=dije They said=dijeron
The noun 'Spanish' is a concretenoun, a word for a person of or from Spain.The noun 'Spanish' is a proper noun and must be capitalized.The word 'Spanish' is also a proper adjective which describes a noun as of or from Spain.
No, "person" is not a verb at all --- it's a noun. However, verbs can occur in various personal forms, and person in verbs can be irregular. For instance, the third person forms of the verb "be" are irregular "is/was/are/were".
The irregular plural form for person is people. Another plural form is persons.
No
A person who opposes warfare on moral grounds
Depends on the exact usage of the word. Vago - describes a person, literally means vagrant but means lazy. Perezoso - Describes a sluggish or unmotivated person. Lento - describes something moving lazily or sluggishly (slowly) Flojo - is another way you could say lazy.
The future perfect third person conjugation for the irregular verb "become" is "will have become."
'Descriptor' is the name for a person who describes a person.