¡Salud! It means health. You say "Jesús" in Spain but "salud" in Latin America.
I think (pronounced ahCHEE!) it's the Spanish version of 'atchoo!' (a sneeze)
Sister in law in Spanish is cunada.
How to say "hi" in spanish is Hola. How to say "bye" in spanish is Adios.
you say it in spanish as- sarina
how do you say the alamo in spanish
You can either say: "Jesus!!" or "Salud!!".
Because when you sneeze the sound you make is "SNEEZE!" ^No, it really isn't. I've not heard one person say "SNEEZE" when they sneeze, ever in my life. I've heard people say "Achoo", "Atishoo" and other ones, but never "SNEEZE".
You should say Salud (if in response to a sneeze)Dios le/te/les/os bendiga (if wishing God's blessing on someone)
In English, you say "Bless you," or "God bless you."In Spanish, you say one of several things depending on where you are and which number of sneeze it is. The first sneeze in Latin America is "Salut!" (health); the second sneeze is "Dinero!" (money); the third sneeze is "Amor!" (love). If you are in Spain, you say "Jesus" for the first sneeze, then "Maria" for the second and "Jose" for the third - Jesus, Mary and Joseph.In German, you say Gesundheit (health).In French, you say "A tes/vos souhalts" (to your wishes).In Dutch, you say "Gesondheid" (health) after the first sneeze, but after the third sneeze, you say "Morgen mooi weer" which means "Good weather tomorrow"In Turkish, you say "Cok yasa" (live long) after the first sneeze and "Sagliki yasa" (live healthy) after the second - the person who sneezes then says "And I hope you'll be around to see it!"In Arabic, you say "Yarhamkum Allah" (God have mercy on you)In Russian, you say "Bod' zdorov(male) or zdorova(female)" (Be healthy) - if someone sneezes while you're talking, you say "Pravdu govor'u" (I'm telling the truth!).In Yiddish, you say "Zay gesunt" (be healthy) after the first sneeze and "Tzu gesunt" (to health) after the second.In Hawaiian, you say "Kihe, a mauli ola" (sneeze and you shall live) or just "Ola!" (live).In Greek, you say "Steen ygeia su" (to your health) or "geitsis" (health)
Bless you.
I think (pronounced ahCHEE!) it's the Spanish version of 'atchoo!' (a sneeze)
I do
they say haliio ling
Because everytime u sneeze u lose a day of life\( ^.^ )/
In Portuguese, you can say "saúde" which means health or "Deus te abençoe" which means God bless you in response to a sneeze.
they say Kai lon unga.
You just say bless you.