For the action going on right now, "¿Estás bebiendo?"
If you means sometihng like "Are you drinking at the party tonight?", then you do not use the progressive tense. You would say "Vas a beber en la fiesta esta noche?" (Are you going to drik at the party tonight?) or "Beberás en la fiesta esta noche?" (Will you drink at the party tonight?), or even "Bebes en la fiesta esta noche?" (you drink at the party tonight?). The last example,using the present tense for future action, is not proper English, but is quite acceptable in Spanish.
"Beber" is the verb in Spanish meaning "to drink". "Bebiendo" is the gerund form, or "drinking".
he is drinking beer = él toma una cerveza
"El vaso" in Spanish translates to "the glass" in English.
Los hombres están bibiendo.
"¿Qué estás bebiendo esta noche?" (Bebiendo = Drinking) "¿Qué estás tomando esta noche?" (Tomando = Taking, but can also mean drinking)
"Las niñas beben" means "the girls drink" in Spanish.
Kind of roughly, it means 'the woman is drinking'
Tomáis means, "all you [my buddies] drink." As a question, it means, "Are you all drinking?"
Rivers are a water source for crops and drinking water.
You mean, why do we have an English word chocolate? It's because the Spanish discovered people in Mexico drinking this drink. The Spanish interpreted the Aztec word they heard as "chocolate". The Spanish word was passed to the English with the drink. So the word comes from the Aztec by way of Spanish.
Bullfights come from long time ago. Spanish people don't like changes, and when villages feasts come, the only think they do is watching bulls and drinking, so if you remove that from them, you know. PS: I'm spanish and I don't like bulls.
Spanish in the 1500's found the Mayan and Inca drinking/using chocolate . They took it back to Europe .