Examples of using "Lautet" in a sentence and their english translations:
- What is your address?
- What's your address?
What's Mary's maiden name?
- What is your address?
- What's your address?
What's your username?
What's your room number?
What's your home address?
What's the number?
My phone number is 2468.
Tom's callsign is Maverick.
- What's the diagnosis?
- What is the diagnosis?
- My telephone number is 789.
- My phone number is 789.
- What is your advice?
- What's your advice?
The answer is 42.
- What is your address?
- What's your address?
What's Tom's address?
- What's your phone number?
- What is your phone number?
- What's your telephone number?
- What's your phone number?
- What is your phone number?
- What's your telephone number?
What's your room number?
- What's your last name?
- What is your last name?
What's the password?
What's your message?
What's your question?
What's your solution?
What's your email address?
The answer is no.
- What is your surname?
- What's your last name?
- It's the law.
- It is the law.
- That's the law.
What's the address?
What is the emergency number?
- What is the serial number?
- What's the serial number?
- What's your mobile number?
- What is your mobile number?
- What's your cell phone number?
- What's your decision?
- What is your decision?
What's your e-mail address?
- The plural of horse is horses.
- The plural of "horse" is "horses."
The password is "Muiriel".
- What's your wife's maiden name?
- What is your wife's maiden name?
And we learned this.
- What is the correct answer?
- What's the correct answer?
What's your Skype username?
The unspoken question is why.
The only question is how.
My email address is [email protected].
What's Tom's full name?
- What's your new telephone number?
- What's your new phone number?
My telephone number is 9876-5432.
- What's the wifi password?
- What's the Wi-Fi password?
And what is the answer?
By the way, what is your address?
- What's your email address?
- What is your e-mail address?
The question is what are you doing here.
The name of the restaurant is "Old Europe".
There's an ancient and well-known philosophical riddle that asks:
The plural of horse is horses.