Saber means "to know." It means "know" in the sense of knowing information. The verb "conocer" means "know" too but in the way you say you know a person or you know all about something.
A secondary meaning of saber is "to taste".
Saber means to know a fact, conocer means I am familiar with like a person
sin saber que hacer is Spanish for without knowing what to do.
'Saber' means, "to know intellectually." It's different than 'conocer' which means, "to know empirically." The correct use of these two words is a minor achievement on the road to learning Spanish.
Why do you want to know=¿Por qué quieres saber
I am wondering if you mean, "Quiero saber"? That means "I want to know."
Google translate says : What would you like to know. It is the spanish translation.
¿Quién quiere saber? Quien quiere saber (indicativo) Quien quiera saber (subjuntivo)
i que saber
Voy a hacerle saber
Saber, the sword-like weapon = Sable The action, as in to stab with a saber = Acuchillar (to knife)
Debes saber quien tu eres. Deberias saber quien eres.
sin saber que hacer is Spanish for without knowing what to do.
This is how u say it in spanish: que quieres saber?
Yo quiero saber, or you can just say quiero saber, followed by what you want to know.
¿Cuando lo vas a saber?
Saber de ti.
usted no tiene que saber
"Savvy" originates from the Spanish word "sabe," which means "knows." It was later adopted into English, influenced by various other languages like French and Portuguese. "Savvy" is commonly used to refer to understanding or having practical knowledge about something.