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What is the most common way to end a phone call? In Argentina I most commonly heard people ending a phone call with 'Chau' Usually in English we repeat goodbye a few times before we end a call like, 'Ok then, ok bye, ok see you' I heard the same sort of thing in Argentina, 'Bueno chau, besos, ok dale, chau chau' etc
¿Existe una onomatopeya en español para el sonido de murmurar? Los dibujos animados y cómics en japonés usan sonidos parecidos a "fts fts" o "bts bts" como onomatopeya para cuando un personaje está murmurando ¿Existe algo así en español? O si no, ¿cómo se pod
What is the difference between De nada and No hay de qué? There is another way in Spain: No hay por qué darlas It means that you don't need to thank me because helping you was easy for me, or our personal relation is so strong that helping you is taken for granted Actually, the three forms have the same sense, as 'De nada' and 'No hay de qué' can be considered shorter forms of 'No hay por qué darlas' All the three forms are common, with 'De nada
¿Por qué en español hay tan pocas palabras acabadas en u? En el Diccionario de la Lengua Española hay pocas palabras que terminan en "u": alrededor de 75, incluyendo expresiones latinas y palabras importadas ¿Cómo es que hay tan pocas, en comparación co
gramática - Usage of ojalá - Spanish Language Stack Exchange In Latin America, I hear ojalá used mostly by itself as an exclamation, but sometimes in a sentence: Ojalá + que + subjunctive verb For example: Ojalá que yo sepa la respuesta In Spain, I hear o
Congratulations: should I use felicidades or felicitaciones? English I have heard both ¡Felicidades! and ¡Felicitaciones! as translations of the interjection, "Congratulations!" What is the difference between the two, and when is each used? Español He esc
What is the difference between cretino, idiota? [closed] Cretino and idiota are analogous to their English cognates "cretin" and "idiot" - words which originated as medical terms for people with various cognitive disabilities, which by extension gained pejorative senses as general insults attacking a person's intelligence As derogatory senses are acquired, new technical terms are coined to replace them and or refer to more specific conditions e g