Examples of using "Fiestas" in a sentence and their english translations:
He hates parties.
She hates parties.
No more parties.
I hate parties.
- Happy holidays.
- Happy holidays!
Parties are fun.
Parties bore me.
I love parties.
I hate surprise parties.
They hate parties.
Tom hates parties.
She hates parties.
You attend all the parties.
The party puts everyone in high spirits.
They annoy us with their parties.
I love surprise parties.
I hate birthday parties.
Keep throwing parties; you never know, Ronnie could find somebody.
I used to be fun at parties,
She expends her energy on parties.
- I thought you liked parties.
- I thought that you liked parties.
Roger is a party animal.
We put up the flags on national holidays.
The rocket blast opens the celebrations.
It's rare for me to get invited to parties.
She was awkward and reserved at parties.
by attending birthday parties, graduations, and plays.
We hoped to have done with the work before the holidays.
The holidays always bring everyone closer together.
I don't often get invited to parties.
He never gets invited to parties.
Tom doesn't get invited to many parties.
And what about all the after parties.
I still have dates available in October for home parties.
Have you ever invited Tom to your parties?
Chicken pox outbreaks have inspired many children's parties.
She is very shy and feels ill at ease at parties.
We stuffed ourselves with nougat and shortbread cookies during Christmas Holidays.
I hate going to girls' birthday parties. I never know what to get them.
Pedestrians may not walk through the city center during the holidays.
Japanese speakers of English often have difficulty in dealing with informal conversation, such as at parties or in small informal groups.
If you want to have parties in my house, clean up everything afterwards, and don't break anything, or else pay for the damage.
It was Franklin Delano Roosevelt who stirred the pot again in 1939, by moving Thanksgiving to the third Thursday in November. Up until then, Americans had marked the holiday on the last Thursday in November, a date first specified by Lincoln. The new date was Roosevelt's bid to lengthen the Christmas shopping season and boost the nation’s economic recovery after the Great Depression.