More actions
m →Spanish |
|||
| Line 37: | Line 37: | ||
===Spanish=== | ===Spanish=== | ||
* "¡Espero que usted esté teniendo un día fantástico!" - E Fyre | * "¡Espero que usted esté teniendo un día fantástico!" - E Fyre | ||
: Very formal way of addressing a specific person with the use of "usted" ("you") and "esté" ("you are"). Note that this creates a redundant use of "you" when translated directly into English, but creates a strong formal tone in Spanish. | : Very '''''formal way of addressing a specific person''''' with the use of "usted" ("you") and "esté" ("you are"). Note that this creates a redundant use of "you" when translated directly into English, but creates a strong formal tone in Spanish. | ||
* "¡Espero que todos ustedes estén teniendo un día fantástico!" - E Fyre | * "¡Espero que todos ustedes estén teniendo un día fantástico!" - E Fyre | ||
: Used to formally address multiple people at once through the phrase "todos ustedes estén," the equivalent of "you all are." | : Used to '''''formally address multiple people''''' at once through the phrase "todos ustedes estén," the equivalent of "you all are." | ||
* "¡Espero que estés teniendo un día fantástico!" - E Fyre | * "¡Espero que estés teniendo un día fantástico!" - E Fyre | ||
: Relaxed and casual way of addressing a person with the use of the variant "estés" ("you are") and dropping the ultra-formal "usted" entirely. | : Relaxed and '''''casual way of addressing a person''''' with the use of the variant "estés" ("you are") and dropping the ultra-formal "usted" entirely. | ||
* "¡Espero que estén teniendo un día fantástico!" - E Fyre | * "¡Espero que estén teniendo un día fantástico!" - E Fyre | ||
: Used to casually address multiple people with the use of the variant "estén" ("you all are"). | : Used to '''''casually address multiple people''''' with the use of the variant "estén" ("you all are"). | ||
== "I didn't want that ship anyway"== | == "I didn't want that ship anyway"== | ||