<p>Well I'm fluent in Spanish and when people say it as "kay-suh-rah-suh-rah" that is the Spanish pronunciation. Well, an attempt at the Spanish pronunciation...obviously most people can't do it perfectly, but that's not really important. I'm pretty sure that the general spelling of it (without accents or anything) is the same in Spanish and French and possibly Portugeuse too...the root verb "ser" is similar in most Latin-based languages. And it would have accents on the a's, so that's how it is in Spanish at least.</p>
<p>Once again, I love the COMPLETE randomness of us Princeton forum-ers.</p>
<p>Yay Princeton teamwork!
But ok ohmisszanna you seriously must post like 400 times a minute because the first time I ever had a comment from you on a thread like 2 weeks ago you only had like 300something posts and now look at you!</p>
<p>I'm sure you will dedicate your 1000th to Princeton to and we can start a whole new random "a toast!" thread.</p>
<p>If I make bad grades this grading period I'm definitely going to blame the Princeton CC forum. Every time I sit down to do homework I'm like...eh, just REALLLLLLY quickly and then that turns into an hour and I wish I knew how to prioritize.</p>
<p>I was actually thinking of the really really "Que sera, sera" song that my parent plays occasionally. Yeah, and it means the same in French and Spanish, as you guys determined previously.</p>
<p>"Que sera, sera, whatever will be, will be...the future's not our's to see, que sera, sera...what will be, will be."</p>
<p>I always feel really comforted by that song (it's from the 1950's? anyways, really old) when I check SAT scores, LOL =p Incidentally, my parents were playing that in the lounge when I submitted my Pton app. Haha.</p>