Nobody wants to go with me.

A) no va alquien conmigo.
B) no quiere ir conmigo
C) quiere ir nadie conmigo
D) no quiere ir nadie conmigo.

i got c. is that correct?

No. You need "nadie" to make the subject "nobody". That eliminates A and B.

Spanish employs a double negative in sentences like this.

The answer is D

Note that nadie must be in a negative sentence. The positive counter part is alguien.

alguien = some one
nadie = no one

Sra

Actually, option C is not correct. The correct answer is option D, "no quiere ir nadie conmigo." This translates to "nobody wants to go with me." Let me explain why the correct answer is D.

In Spanish, when expressing negation involving a verb and a subject, typically both the verb and the subject need to be negated. This is done using the word "no" before the verb and the word "nadie" (meaning "nobody") before the subject.

In this case, the verb is "quiere" (wants) and the subject is "nadie" (nobody). So, to say "nobody wants," we need to use "no" before the verb and "nadie" before the subject.

Therefore, the correct translation of "nobody wants to go with me" is "no quiere ir nadie conmigo," which is option D.