He says "Where the hell have you been loca?" which is spanish for "crazy girl/woman" and "Que Quowle" which is Quileute. From what I've found out by asking my self, this means "Stay with me forever."
I heard it means beautiful.
Someone who is crazy and acts loca!
"Livin' La Vida Loca" is a Ricky Martin song.
actually, the tree dot triangle symbol is a common gangster logo. it is not affiliated with any one gang, but represents a life in crime, and a path at odds w/ society. it stands for "mi vida loca." some ppl call em 'party dots' but theyre complete idiots who got tattoos for the wrng reasons.
He actually says "loca" which is spanish for crazy. See his answer below from: http://screencrave.com/2009-11-18/taylor-lautner-interview-for-new-moon/Your character says 'loca' to Bella. Do you speak Spanish, and are you going to be speaking more of it in the future?TL: I don't' speak much Spanish. I took it in school, that was about it. I think it's Jacob's personality. He's outgoing, he's random. It definitely doesn't have anything to do with his character just the fact that he's friendly and you never know what to expect.
She says:About three things I was absolutely positiveFirst, Edward was a vampireSecond, there was a part of him - and I didn't know how dominant that part might be - that thirsted for my bloodAnd third, I was unconditionally and irrevocably in love with him
I think it's supposed to be loca, which means crazy...
He says "Where the hell have you been loca?" which is spanish for "crazy girl/woman" and "Que Quowle" which is Quileute. From what I've found out by asking my self, this means "Stay with me forever."
Loca is sung in Spanish.
Estoy Loca was created in 2003.
Me Vuelves Loca was created in 1999.
Loca juventud was created in 1965.
LOCA Records was created in 1999.
"Loca" is a Spanish word that translates to "places" in English.
Una loca is a Spanish equivalent of the English phrase "a crazy woman." The feminine singular phrase also translates as "one crazy woman" in English. The pronunciation will be "OO-na LO-ca" in Uruguayan Spanish.
la vida loca