na·da. Nothing; zero. [Spanish, nothing, from Old Spanish, from Vulgar Latin * (rēs) nāta, born (thing), anything (used in the phrase *nōn rēs nāta, not anything, literally "not a born thing," probably on the model of *hominēs nātī, anyone, literally "born people") : Latin rēs, thing + Latin nāta, feminine of nātus, past slang for "nothing," 1933 (Hemingway), from Spanish nada "nothing," from Latin (res) nata "small, insignificant thing," literally " (thing) born," from natus, past participle of nasci "to be born" (Old Latin gnasci ), from PIE root *gene- "give birth, beget." First in Hemingway's "A Clean, Well-Lighted Place," set in a Spanish cafe, in which According to Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, and the American Heritage Unabridged Dictionary of the English Language, nada is the Spanish word for nothing. This word is used as slang in English for nothing, for something of a quantity of no importance, or for some unsuccessful effort. nothing in British English. (ˈnʌθɪŋ ) pronoun. 1. (indefinite) no thing; not anything, as of an implied or specified class of things. I can give you nothing. 2. no part or share. to have nothing to do with this crime. Other forms: nadas. Nada means "nothing." The kids next door will be disappointed if they learn that their lemonade stand has earned them nada. The noun nada is an informal way to say "zero." If you ask a deli worker how many plain bagels he has, and he answers, " Nada ," it means they're out of your favorite kind. nada (noun) nada / ˈ nɑːdə/ noun. Britannica Dictionary definition of NADA. [noncount] informal. : 1 nothing 1. It won't cost you anything—zero, nothing, nada. NADA meaning: nothing. 21mIu.

does nada mean nothing