"I don't speak Dutch".
No, Yo means "I" Yo hablo = I speak.
si, yo hablo espanol
Yo hablo muy poquito espanol.
¿Sabes hablar español? or ¿Hablas español?EDIT: If speaking to someone who you do not know, or someone of authority, you should use the usted form rather than the tu form - therefore it would be ¿Sabe hablar español? / ¿Habla español? It is more polite.
Answer: No hablo español muy bien.More information: You would only say the "Yo" at the beginning as in "yo no hablo..." if you were emphasizing that *you* didn't speak well. I.e., someone before you said that *they* spoke well so you're comparing yourself to them."Hablo" is the "I" or "yo" conjugation of the verb. In English, we don't distinguish pronouns as much. You'd say "I speak, You speak, He/she/it speaks, We speak, They speak". In Spanish, you'd say "Yo hablo, tú hablas, él/ella/usted habla, nosotros hablamos, ellos/ellas/ustedes hablan". Because of this, you don't need to say the pronoun. It's already clear from the verb.Make sure not to say "bueno" instead of "bien", "bueno" is an adjective (modifies nouns) while "bien" is an adverb (modifies verbs like "speak").
No, Yo means "I" Yo hablo = I speak.
Hablo español / castellano
*Yo no hablo con gente falsa. *Yo no hablo con falsos. *Yo no hablo con gente hipócrita. *Yo no hablo con hipócritas. Hope it helps U!!
Yo hablo--- - 1940 is rated/received certificates of: Argentina:Atp
Yo hablo.
"I don't speak Spanish" is "No hablo español."
si, yo hablo espanol
yo hablo español
Google translator states it as "Yo no hablo mexicano" -- however, there is no such language as "Mexican" so the proper statement is: (yo) No hablo español = I do not speak Spanish
The cast of Yo hablo... - 1940 includes: Herminia Franco Herminia Mancini Samuel Sanda Luis Segre Alberto Terrones
Yo no hablo español
Yo soy Ingles y yo no hablo espanol.