the proper way to say it is : "haz silencio".
greetings!★
2006-12-09 10:48:00
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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The way you say this depends on to whom you are speaking. If to a friend, you might say, "Callate," but not to someone superior to you or someone who is not a friend. For them, you might ask for silence, which would be, "Silencio, por favor." Or, "Haga silencio, por favor." But this might offend the listener. A better way would be to ask the person to listen to you by saying, "Escucheme, por favor," if it's only one person. If you're talking to more than one person, "Escuchenme, por favor," would be necessary because it indicates you're talking to the entire group. In Spain, if it's a group of friends, you would say, "Escuchadme, por favor." I've never heard another person tell an unknown person or a superior to be quiet in Spanish. I've only heard a request for the other's attention as in, "Listen, please."
2006-12-09 11:31:07
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answer #2
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answered by quietwalker 5
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'Cállate', as some people suggested, would mean 'Shut up'. Be quiet, which is more polite, would be 'haz silencio'. I haven't heard 'sea reservado', so it isn't generic Spanish, it must be from a specific region.
2006-12-09 09:15:17
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answer #3
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answered by Fxer 2
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in case you do no longer take exhilaration in it , then confident, you ought to stop , a minimum of for now. in case you're particular it incredibly is the project that's bothering you, you ought to attempt Esperanto. No grammatical gender (dutch and german have), no atypical verbs (dutch and german have), consistent spelling, many words that encompass incredibly remembered wordparts (in assessment to english). in accordance to the US distant places provider Institute, dutch and swedish are not to any extent further handy than spanish, and german is even slightly greater sturdy. although, it incredibly is completely achieveable you have greater skills for germanic languages, and whether you're no longer, in simple terms liking the language you study will advance the outcomes
2016-10-05 02:33:12
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answer #4
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answered by huenke 4
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be quiet = cállate, silencio, cierra la boca
always add por favor at the end, otherwise it sound a little bit rude.
I wouldn´t use sea reservado it means something else.
2006-12-09 10:16:15
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answer #5
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answered by Martha P 7
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be quit? be quiet??? cuz thats either silencio(silence) or callate la boca(shut your mouth) por favor at the end if you want to be polite...
2006-12-09 09:19:59
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answer #6
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answered by M T 5
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por favor callate la boca.
please be quite
2006-12-09 08:24:28
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answer #7
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answered by student 2
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Guarda silencio, or estate callado
2006-12-09 14:44:20
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answer #8
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answered by burbujita 1
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Callate!
That means "shut up"
(Remember, that is pronounced:
kie-yuh-tay
2006-12-10 09:56:45
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answer #9
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answered by Ana Erikson 3
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I think you mean "be quiet"
In spanish you would say "cayate" with the "Y" pronounced as in "Y"ellow.
2006-12-09 08:14:42
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answer #10
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answered by funkucla!!! 3
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