Adam
''it is what it is'' in Spanish In common English, we have a saying, ''it is what it is''. Is there a similar phrase in Spanish? It's hard to explain the meaning in other words, but it means something like, ''the truth is readily apparent.'' In this case, what ''the truth'' is is left to the reader to infer from context. I'll give you an example from a TV show. A male and a female are talking, and the female says something that sounds very conceited. The male says, ''What? Cause you're so hot?'' The female says, ''It is what it is.'' Basically, she's saying that she does not have to say that she's hot because anybody can readily see that she is hot.
May 27, 2020 4:56 AM
Answers · 19
1
When a " truth is readily apparent'' we use = "lo que se ve no se juzga" but does't have a fatalist meaning.
May 27, 2020
1
We could say: "es lo que hay".
May 27, 2020
Decimos: ¡Salta a la vista!
May 27, 2020
I think that the frase "salta a la vista" is use when something is too obvious. The translation of "it is what it is" is "es lo que es" and it means that something is that way and you have to accept it because is not going to chage. "Es lo que hay" is also correct, I usually used it and it's a synonym of "es lo que es".
June 2, 2020
To anyone reading: I'm really not sure what the best answer is, but I did not want to leave this question open anymore. I think the answers provided two or more options that fit in various situations and there just isn't a single correct answer.
May 29, 2020
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