Jobs & Education1 min ago
Que Sera Sera
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Ways or symbols of saying what will be will be in different cultures.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I use to go to spain every year as a child, when i went, by the end of the week my spanish would very basic, but OK. Then when it came to next year, i'd forget and have to learn again.
Now i am where i am, i find learning quite hard. My brain isn't like it use to be. It would take a lot of effort and time for me to learn spanish
I begged and begged my school to allow me to learn spanish, but they forced me into french simply because of the side of the year i was on. Not fair at all. I got a D in french.
Now i am where i am, i find learning quite hard. My brain isn't like it use to be. It would take a lot of effort and time for me to learn spanish
I begged and begged my school to allow me to learn spanish, but they forced me into french simply because of the side of the year i was on. Not fair at all. I got a D in french.
In Thai it is approximately (the sounds don't translate properly with English lettering)
Alai mun ja geurt gorh geurt
However, I have never heard this spoken before
Thai's use the same expression to mean many different things and you guess what it means from the context.
"mai penh rai"
This really means no problem, or that's OK, or whatever but would also probably be used for que sera sera also
Alai mun ja geurt gorh geurt
However, I have never heard this spoken before
Thai's use the same expression to mean many different things and you guess what it means from the context.
"mai penh rai"
This really means no problem, or that's OK, or whatever but would also probably be used for que sera sera also