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How To Say These Following Times In Spanish .

How do you say the following times in spanish? And were can i find a huge slushy machiene cheap for fccla??

go look it up.

i could do it, i study spanish, and can name all these times. the thing is is that your teacher probably explained, but you just didn't pay attention. i'm not doin it for you, but ill tell you how.

For the times, use es la or son las, es la for 1 and son las for everything else. this is because hora is feminine. Then say the hour, and the minutes, up to thirty. for :15 minutes, its cuarto (like quarter) and media for thirty. if it's after thirty, go to the next hour, and subtract the minutes. ill do two to show you

1-12: es la uno y doce
3-35: son las cuatro menos viente y cinco. (go up, then subtract for anything after 30 mins.)

okay, now do it your self, and if you dont read this and actually pay attention then you deserve to fail your test.

How do you write the following times in spanish?

1:11 : Es la una y once minutosde la mañana

3:45 : Son las quatro menos cuarto de la mañana

7:55 : Son las ocho menos cinco minutos de la mañana

4:15 : Son las quatro y cuarto de la mañana

12:08 : Es la una y ocho minutos de la tarde

How do you say the following times in spanish in word format not numbers?

10:49, 11:35, 12:56.
Please help if you can, I really need to know how to write these specific times to use them in my spanish paper.

Thanks, In Advance
10 points=best answer

Help with writing the times in Spanish?

12:00AM = Las doce (mediodía)
7:05AM = las siete y cinco de la mañana
9:35AM = las diez menos veinticinco de la mañana
5:15pm = las cinco y quince OR las cinco y cuarto de la tarde
1:30AM = la una y media de la mañana
1:10PM = la una y diez de la tarde
11:35A.M = las doce menos veinticinco de la mañana
8:15PM = las ocho y quince OR las ocho y cuarto de la tarde

From 00.00 AM until 12.00 AM it's: de la mañana
12.00 AM it's: mediodía (noon)
from 12.00 AM until 12 PM it's: de la tarde and in the late hours also "de la noche"

You always start with the full hour, then add a quarter or the exact minutes or half an hour.
When you reach the half hour you start counting backwards beginning with the next full hour. Example:

2.00 = son las dos
2.15 = son las dos y cuarto
2.20 = son las dos y veinte
2.30 = son las dos y media
2.35 = son las tres menos veinticinco (three minus 25 minutes)
2.45 = son las tres menos cuarto (three minus a quarter)
2.55 = son las tres menos cinco
3.00 = son las tres

When having full hours most people add: "en punto" - son las tres en punto

How do you say 2:10, 1:15, 8 :45, 3:00, 11:55 in spanish?

2:10, las dos y diez
1:15, la una y cuarto ; la una y quince
8 :45, cuarto para las nueve; las ocho y cuarenta y cinco
3:00, las tres en punto
11:55 cinco para las doce; las once y cincuenta y cinco

How do you say these times in a complete sentence in spanish?

Hi!

10:20 - las diez y veinte
1:25 - la una y veinticinco
3:06 - las tres y seis minutos
4:13 - las cuatro y trece minutos
5:22 - las cinco y veintidos minutos
4:55 - las cinco menos cinco
5:55 - las seis menos cinco
6:50 - las siete menos diez
12:35 - la una menos veinticinco
7:44 - las siete y cuarenta y cuatro minutos/ las ocho menos dieciseis minutos
8:51 - las ocho y cincuenta y un minutos / las nueve menos nueve minutos
4:45 - las cinco menos cuarto
5:45 - las seis menos cuarto
6:45 - las siete menos cuarto
7:45 - las ocho menos cuarto

How do you say "Them" in Spanish?

This is a little tricky.First of all, “them” is use in English as a pronoun that means “they” but the difference is that “them” is used after the verb.Spanish usually omit pronouns, like Italian. It’s the proper way to write and speak. Many times the translation of ”them” in Spanish is a pronoun to omit the main personal pronoun (in Spanish these are called “pronombres átonos”). Let’s see the following examples:1 “los/las” (as a direct object): I love them - “Los quiero”2 “les” (as an indirect object): I gave them the book - “Les di el libro”See that “les” don’t have gender variation.But also “them” in English can be a personal pronoun in Spanish. Like these:3 “ellos or ellas” (as a complement of the verb ser “to be”) It’s them! - ¡Son ellos/ellas!4 “ellos or ellas” (after a preposition): I’m in love with them - Estoy enamorado/enamorada de ellos/ellasSo the translation depends on what you want to say.I hope this answer your question

Can anyone explain the following spanish (ser estar) difference?

Ser - permanence, quality, essence, role : soy hombre, soy el presidente
Estar - temporary, position: estoy en mi casa, estoy contento

In everyday Spanish, in certain situations including when it comes to appearance, sometimes we use either verb; so, in your example the correct one is SON; in everyday Spanish, could be either one of them, usually ESTAN.

How do you say I don't care in Spanish?

I am contributing a humorous example.In Spain, and Latin America in general, a very (as in VERY)  rude way to say "I don't care" is: "Me vale." Me vale madre is even worse, because of Latin American family values. A rough translation might be: I don't give a mother's fu.k. I know. It is rude.This is the kind of phrase that will assure a child a whooping if told to his parents.Note: I am a Latina mom, and I do not physically punish children. However, the following example is quite common.Example:Latina Mom: (catching a teenage son playing video games very  late on a weekday): -Do you have an idea what time it is?Boy:-La hora me vale. (I don't care what time is it)Mom:-What did YOU just SAY? (while reaching for a belt)--------------------------Let me also differentiate the following:No importa (without the pronoun me--meaning to me--between the words) is used colloquially to mean "don't worry," or "it's OK."Example:Me: -OMG! I just sent my answer to Quora, and it has a typo! Now someone is going to downvote it!My friend:No importa, you can always edit your answer.Using NO ME IMPORTA means I don't care, and it can be as rude as you mean it.-Pablo is sick.-No me importa. (You don't care Pablo is sick. Rude)Alternate answer:-No importa. He is strong and he is going to get better. This will roughly translate into It's OK, he is strong and going to get better. Not rude. Use with caution though. When in doubt, don't use it.-That bird pooped on your shirt.-Ah, no me importa... it's been a rough day anyway. Not rude.

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