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Quien is particularly common as the object of a preposition when the clause is non-defining, but is also possible in defining clauses: Ella es la persona a quien le di el dinero = "She is the person to whom I gave the money" José, gracias a quien tengo el dinero, es muy generoso = "José, thanks to whom I have the money, is very generous"
Spanish is a pro-drop language with respect to subject pronouns, and, like many European languages, Spanish makes a T-V distinction in second person pronouns that has no equivalent in modern English. Object pronouns can be both clitic and non-clitic, with non-clitic forms carrying greater emphasis.
Seré yo quien se lo diga = "It will be I who tells him" Son pocos los que vienen y se quedan = lit. "There are few who come and stay" Note that it is ungrammatical to try to use just que to cleave such sentences as in English, but using quien in singular or quienes in plural is grammatical. * Fue Juan que perdió las llaves (incorrect)
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1996: Cake covered the English version on their album Fashion Nugget; 2000: Mari Wilson sang it for the titles of the television series Coupling. 2008: Halie Loren released a version on her album They Oughta Write a Song, using the English and Spanish lyrics. 2010: Gaby Moreno released a single simply titled "Quizás."
Norman Gimbel took the song, removed the somewhat melancholy Spanish lyrics about a man wondering if he shall ever love again, and wrote brand-new English lyrics about a man praising his dancing partner's ability to affect his heart with how she "sways" when they dance.
(English title: Who is Who?), [2] is an American telenovela produced by Gemma Lombardi, Joshua Mintz and Carmen Cecilia Urbaneja for Telemundo. [1] It is an adaptation of the telenovela produced in 2003, Amor descarado. [3] [4] Danna Paola, Eugenio Siller, Laura Flores and Carlos Espejel star opposite Kimberly Dos Ramos and Jonathan Islas. [5] [6]
The song is a regional Mexican track that combines elements of Latin pop. [2] It is accompanied by the instrumentalization of acoustic guitars and trumpets. [3] It was written by Maluma, Edgar Barrera, Kevyn Cruz Moreno, Lenin Yorney Palacios and Luis Miguel Gómez Castaño. [2]