Examples of using "Primos" in a sentence and their english translations:
- We are cousins.
- We're cousins.
I have three cousins.
- They are my cousins.
- They're my cousins.
My cousins live on the beach.
He and I are cousins.
The two boys are cousins.
Tom and I are cousins.
My cousins live in Boston.
How old are your cousins?
Tom and Mary are cousins.
I like my cousins a lot.
- Nobody knows that we're cousins.
- Nobody knows we're cousins.
- No one knows we're cousins.
- No one knows that we're cousins.
Tom has three cousins.
They're cousins.
- They were cousins.
- They were first cousins.
- They were male and female first cousins.
I think that Tom and Mary are cousins.
On my mother's side of the family, I have three male cousins.
Did you know Tom and Mary were cousins?
- I didn't know that Tom was Mary's cousin.
- I didn't know Tom was Mary's cousin.
I think that Tom and Mary are cousins.
One of my cousins is married to a novelist.
My cousins still live in Kabylie, Algeria.
I play a lot with my cousins, nieces and nephews.
Tom and Mary are your cousins, aren't they?
My cousins live near the beach.
Prime numbers are capable of generating the rest of the numbers.
Prime numbers are divisible only by one and themselves.
by three men, three cousins, on the orders of her father and uncle.
Every even number greater than 2 is the sum of two primes.
Tom has over thirty first cousins, some of whom he's never met.
You and I are cousins.
God may not play dice with the universe, but something strange is going on with the prime numbers.
Tom has twenty first cousins on his mother's side, and an unknown number on his father's side.
Prime numbers are like life; they are completely logical, but impossible to find the rules for, even if you spend all your time thinking about it.