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2006-12-30 15:44:20 · 12 answers · asked by boo 2 in Society & Culture Languages

12 answers

Sarang (Love) he (action verb, VERY roughly translates as doing) yo (thing you put at end of sentence to signify respect or when you are talking to strangers, superiors, elders, etc.)

2006-12-30 16:21:48 · answer #1 · answered by Dynamite 4 · 2 0

In spanish Te quiero. or Te amo
You might could go to some website that does some language translations.
What is some site that does language translations. Isnt that www.babblefish.com or something

2006-12-31 01:55:00 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

When did Kim Jung Il require his girls to speak?

I do know how Japanese women say they want to love me-But I think I would be in violation of guidelines if I repeated any of it here!

2006-12-30 23:50:11 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

There are differences between north and south. In the north it is like I want some nuke.

2006-12-30 23:47:37 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

just say saranghe. There are many ways to say ilove you in korean but SARANGHE is the simplest and most common...

2006-12-30 23:49:34 · answer #5 · answered by Jesus M 7 · 1 1

Sa-rang-he-yo (사랑해요)

2007-01-03 21:09:37 · answer #6 · answered by gogogo 3 · 0 0

야! WTF is up with the stereotyping here? 빠순이

안노시팔 -______-



You kids need to grow up. Sorry your white-washed-b_tchy parents didn't teach you there are different kinds people in the world






It's Saranghaeyo.



Sa-rang-hae-yo

Spelled as:

사랑해요 in Korean.

2006-12-31 06:25:49 · answer #7 · answered by Crush 2 · 0 0

i looked it up its...cung heny chung looy

2006-12-31 00:11:58 · answer #8 · answered by umm....who 1 · 0 1

sarang heyo?

2006-12-30 23:49:48 · answer #9 · answered by ^.^ dAnieLLa ^.^ 2 · 1 0

oh i know that it means "사랑해요"

2007-01-03 18:29:12 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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