Examples of using "Ricas" in a sentence and their english translations:
They're rich.
- They are well off.
- You are rich.
- They're rich.
- They're well off.
We're rich.
Do you want to be rich?
Rich pickings for a hungry prawn.
Do you want to be rich?
- Mandarins are rich in vitamins.
- Mandarin oranges are rich in vitamins.
Oranges are rich in vitamin C.
Rich people also tend to be from rich families.
Or say my indifference to the children of wealthy families
Berries are high in minerals such as potassium.
- He came from one of the richest families in America.
- He came from one of the richest families in the United States.
This store's hamburgers taste better than that one's.
By systematically destabilizing the wealthiest African nations
in one of the most culturally rich and beautiful European cities
Do you want to be rich?
and, on the left of those tables, is delicious chocolate chip cookies,
- Oranges contain a lot of vitamin C.
- Oranges are rich in vitamin C.
- Oranges have a lot of vitamin C.
Oranges contain a lot of vitamin C.
because I grew up poor white trash in one of the wealthiest towns in the US.
- Bananas are delicious.
- A banana is delicious.
A century ago, Argentina was one of the richest countries in the world, even richer than countries
At the same time, São Paulo is both one of the world's poorest and richest cities.
This store's hamburgers taste better than that one's.
I believe advanced economies still need to do more to close the gap between rich and poor nations around the globe.
By getting used to using emojis and other abbreviations to indicate the message's tone, young people drain languages of emotion, relegating words to bland pieces of information, becoming incapable of detecting any emotion at all without these symbols. It makes you wonder how our ancestors could laugh or cry with the correspondence they received. Languages, once so rich in this duality, are now evolving to become combinations of two distinct symbol systems: one for content, the other for tone.