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His song "Nosotros" was first sung in February 1943 by the singer Tony Chiroldes on the radio station from Pinar del Río CMAB. Since then, "Nosotros" has been sung by more than 400 artists such as Sara Montiel, Plácido Domingo and Luis Miguel. "Nosotros" Atiéndeme, Quiero decirte algo, Que quizás no esperes, - Doloroso tal vez,
Nosotros los guapos is a Mexican sitcom that premiered on Blim on August 19, 2016, and ended on Las Estrellas on 16 February 2020. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The series is created and produced by Guillermo del Bosque for Televisa . [ 3 ]
Nosotros (English: Us) was a Spanish anarchist militant group during the period of the Second Spanish Republic in the 1930s. The group was a reorganisation of Los Solidarios , a militant group that had resisted the dictatorship of Primo de Rivera .
Quite unusually among European languages, the first- and second-person plural subject pronouns (nosotros/nosotras and vosotros/vosotras, respectively) inflect for gender: nosotros and vosotros are used to refer to groups of men (as well as mixed-gender groups), while nosotras and vosotras are used exclusively to refer to groups of women.
Jul. 19—Nosotros is busy. The 10-piece Latin band is playing everywhere, from Fort Marcy Park to the Albuquerque Museum Amphitheater this summer, bringing its brand of salsa-tinged fusion music ...
Nosotros los Nobles, also called The Noble Family and We Are the Nobles, is a 2013 Mexican dark comedy film directed by Gary Alazraki, starring Gonzalo Vega, Luis Gerardo Méndez, Karla Souza and Juan Pablo Gil, with Ianis Guerrero, Karla Sofía Gascón and Mario Haddad in supporting roles.
The pronouns yo, tú, vos, [1] él, nosotros, vosotros [2] and ellos are used to symbolise the three persons and two numbers. Note, however, that Spanish is a pro-drop language , and so it is the norm to omit subject pronouns when not needed for contrast or emphasis.
Note that the term vosotros is a combined form of vos otros (meaning literally 'ye/you others'), while the term nosotros comes from nos otros ("we/us others"). In the first half of the 19th century, the use of vos was as prevalent in Chile as it was in Argentina.