"Sin salida" in Spanish means "no way out" or "dead end." It refers to a situation where there is no escape or alternative path available.
The Spanish word "un sacapuntas" translates to "a pencil sharpener" in English.
"Necesito un lรกpiz" means "I need a pencil" in Spanish.
If you mean "un niño," that means "a child." The "~" symbol on top of the "n" in Spanish changes the sound to more like "ny."
"Un perrito" in Spanish means "a puppy" in English.
"Sin salida" in Spanish means "no way out" or "dead end." It refers to a situation where there is no escape or alternative path available.
Yes. Salida means the place where you go out, like an exit. A date/appointment in Spanish is a cita. In this use, salida is a probable borrow in connotation from English. "You owe me a going out," is a reasonable literal translation.
The Spanish word for "exit" is "salida" (sah-LEE-dah).
How to say "exit" in spanish is salida hope that helped!
If you mean a dead end street, that's known as "callejón sin salida".
In Spanish, it directly translates into "Hour of output", but in good English, it would be "Departure time."
In Spanish, that is "es un matrimonio".
'en un' = 'in a'
la tercera salida
The word going in Spanish translates in many ways. A few translations are Ir, la salida, la partida, naciente, corriente, and existente.
Translation: Un Tigre
it is a...