Nice
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Neophyte
May 03, 2006, 12:29 AM
According to the dictionary, "nice" can be
simpático nice
mono ADJ nice ADJ
bonito nice
simpática ADJ nice ADJ
agradable nice
amable nice
I want to know if I want to say have a nice day, which one should I use?
Tomisimo
May 03, 2006, 01:16 AM
To say "have a nice day", I'd say "Que tenga(s) un buen día" :)
Neophyte
May 03, 2006, 07:28 AM
gracias
But can I say have a nice day with one of the other words listed from the dict?
thanks
noah
Tomisimo
May 03, 2006, 07:58 AM
You could also say
¡Qué tengas bonito día! -or-
¡Qué tengas un día agradable!
johnny007
May 03, 2006, 08:04 AM
Can you use simpatica? Like in Que tengas un simpatico dia?
Thx
Tomisimo
May 03, 2006, 10:34 AM
Can you use simpatica? Like in Que tengas un simpatico dia?
Thx
Doesn't sound too good to me.
I0AM6ME
May 09, 2006, 11:01 PM
I think instead of using tengas it would be "tienes" because tener is irregular. In the I or yo form it is tengo, but in the you or tu form it is tienes. In the He/she or el/ella form it is tiene. the we or nosotros form is conjugated regularly as tenemos, and the they or ellos form is irregular as tienen. "Tienes una buena dia" would work. However using any of the different forms of nice would work. In the future tense, which is even better, it would be "tendrás una buena dia". The future tense is irregular too. As for why it's "buena" instead of "buen", with "dia" it's feminine, which is why it's "una" instead of "un". I think that simpatico/a is more for describing peoples personalities rather than an item or a thing. I believe buen and buena are more like good than nice. They are fairly interchangeable though, so you can use whichever word you like and you will probably still be understood. Using simpatico/a it would be "tendrás una simpatica dia."
Just thought that would help. :)
Nix
May 10, 2006, 03:45 AM
I think instead of using tengas it would be "tienes" because tener is irregular. In the I or yo form it is tengo, but in the you or tu form it is tienes. In the He/she or el/ella form it is tiene. the we or nosotros form is conjugated regularly as tenemos, and the they or ellos form is irregular as tienen. "Tienes una buena dia" would work. However using any of the different forms of nice would work. In the future tense, which is even better, it would be "tendrás una buena dia". The future tense is irregular too. As for why it's "buena" instead of "buen", with "dia" it's feminine, which is why it's "una" instead of "un". I think that simpatico/a is more for describing peoples personalities rather than an item or a thing. I believe buen and buena are more like good than nice. They are fairly interchangeable though, so you can use whichever word you like and you will probably still be understood. Using simpatico/a it would be "tendrás una simpatica dia."
Just thought that would help. :)
Thought dia was el dia, thats what my Spanish teacher told us.
shruti
May 13, 2006, 05:13 PM
día is masculine
and tengas is the informal you command form of tener
Tomisimo
May 15, 2006, 12:33 PM
Actually tengas is the informal you in subjunctive mode, also used for negative commands. Ten is the informal you command.
Ten cuidado - Be careful - Informal command
No tengas miedo - Don't be afraid - Informal command (negative)
No quiero que tengas miedo - I don't want you to be afraid - Subjunctive
shruti
May 15, 2006, 04:14 PM
Er, yeah. *cough*
that's what I meant?
Mom of 5
May 15, 2006, 04:46 PM
Er, yeah. *cough*
that's what I meant?
Sorry for a short meaningless post, but you really made me laugh. Thanks. :)
atnbueno
May 18, 2006, 11:17 AM
Can you use simpatica? Like in Que tengas un simpatico dia?
That would be something like "Have a funny day" ;D
Planet hopper
October 18, 2008, 04:05 AM
My 2 cents:
In Spain we often say 'que lo pases bien'
'Que tengas un buen dia' is also possible, though it sounds to me rather context-bound, would be a couple at breakfast time, before leaving for work or similar...
If u wanna make it more emphatic you could say 'que te lo pases como los indios' :)
Que tengas un simpatico dia does not sound common usage, at least to me.
For the overused 'nice' we have a hundred choices, some of them slangish, such as chachi, genial, perita, dabuten
Jessica
October 18, 2008, 09:49 AM
buen ;)
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