/Sounds like 'tah-gweh-AR'/
To tag someone in a social media post, photo, or comment — linking their name so they get notified. Taggear is one of the most essential Spanglish verbs of the internet age, fully conjugated and used daily by everyone from teenagers to brand accounts across the Spanish-speaking world.
"Taggéame en la foto del cumpleaños. → "Tag me in the birthday photo."
"No me taggees en eso, no quiero que me vean. → "Don't tag me in that — I don't want people to see me."
/Sounds like 'tah-gweh-AR'/
To tag someone in a social media post, photo, or comment — linking their name so they get notified. Taggear is one of the most essential Spanglish verbs of the internet age, fully conjugated and used daily by everyone from teenagers to brand accounts across the Spanish-speaking world.
"Taggéame en la foto del cumpleaños. → "Tag me in the birthday photo."
"No me taggees en eso, no quiero que me vean. → "Don't tag me in that — I don't want people to see me."