flour package
The Spanish term 'paquete de harina' directly translates to 'flour package' in English. This refers to a packaged quantity of flour, as found in shops or supermarkets. This is often used in contexts of baking or cooking, where the flour is a necessary ingredient. Understanding both words separately, 'paquete' means 'package' and 'harina' means 'flour', thus when put together it forms 'flour package'
I'm going to buy a package of flour to make bread.
This sentence is indicating the speaker's intention to acquire a package of flour for the specific purpose of baking bread. It demonstrates the direct object (a package of flour) that the speaker wants to buy.
Could you pass me that package of flour, please?
In this sentence, the speaker is asking someone else to give them a package of flour. It uses the polite form 'Could you' for requests, which in Spanish is '¿Podrías?'.
The package of flour fell and scattered all over the floor.
This sentence is a statement describing a situation where a package of flour has fallen and its contents have spread all over the floor. It illustrates the use of the reflexive verb 'se cayó' in indicating that the package fell.