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i love you in different languages- pronunciation also.

2007-01-30 20:26:48 · 23 answers · asked by No Name 1 in Society & Culture Languages

23 answers

Spanish - te quiero (Tay Key AIR oh)
French - je t'aime (zhe tame)
Italian - ti amo (tee AH-moh)

Now someone else's turn...

2007-01-30 20:35:26 · answer #1 · answered by chip2001 7 · 1 0

Wow!!!! I never expected to see Maltese on here !!!! Sorry Haggis that you are homesick for Scotland BUT Malta is warmer and so are the people!

Je t'aime......French.
Mai apko piyar hogay.....Hindi

I cant think of any more right now because I was zapped when I saw the Maltese lol.

Well Natasha certainly has had a lot of lovers or she has been spending an awful lot of time on the web looking them up lol

2007-01-31 04:41:44 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Polish: Kocham cie pron. Kokham tsie

Russian: Ya lyooblyoo tieebia

2007-01-31 04:44:14 · answer #3 · answered by magdadh 1 · 0 0

Ich liebe dich in German - pronounced as follows:

Ich - it depends on from what part of Germany the speaker hails - the pronunciation runs the gammut from 'ish' in the South to 'ick' in Berlin, but properly, it should be pronounced with a guttural ch sound - as if you're clearing your throat.

liebe - always in German, when there is an 'ie' or 'ei' combination, it's the second vowel that is pronounced, so it's sounds as 'leebe' - pronouncing the final 'e' as a schwa - 'uh'.

Dich - rhymes with 'ich' - so D, short i, guttural ch.

Hope that helps!

2007-01-31 04:40:35 · answer #4 · answered by mattygroves 3 · 0 2

afrikaans Ek het jou liefe

batak Holong rohangku di ho

bavarian I mog di narrisch gern

bengali Ami tomAy bhAlobAshi

bengali Ami tomake bhalobashi.

berber Lakh tirikh

bicol Namumutan ta ka

bolivian Quechua qanta munani

bulgarian Obicham te

burmese chit pa de

cambodian Bon sro lanh oon

catalan T'estimo (catalonian)

cebuano Gihigugma ko ikaw.

chickasaw chiholloli (first "i" nasalized)

chinese Wo ie ni

corsican Ti tengu cara (to female)

czech MILUJU TE! (colloquial form)

danish Jeg elsker dig

dutch Ik hou van jou

dutch Ik ben verliefd op je

ecuador Quechua canda munani

esperanto Mi amas vin

estonian Mina armastan sind

estonian Ma armastan sind

farsi Tora dust midaram

farsi Asheghetam

farsi (Persian) doostat dAram

filipino Mahal ka ta

french Je t'aime

friesian Ik hald fan dei

gaelic Ta gra agam ort

galego (galicia) querote (or) amote

german Ich liebe Dich

greek s' agapo

greek (old) (Ego) philo su (ego is only needed for
emphasis)

gujrati Hoon tane pyar karoochhoon.

hausa Ina sonki

hebrew Ani ohev otach (male to female)

hebrew Ani ohev otcha (male to male)

hebrew Ani ohevet otach (female to female)

hebrew Ani ohevet otcha (female to male)

hindi Mai tumse pyar karta hoo

hokkien Wa ai lu

hopi Nu' umi unangwa'ta

hungarian Szeretlek

hungarian Szeretlek te'ged

icelandic Eg elska thig

indonesian Saja kasih saudari

indonesian Saya Cinta Kamu

indonesian Saya cinta padamu

indonesian Aku cinta padamu

irish taim i' ngra leat

italian ti amo (if it's a relationship/lover/spouse)

italian ti voglio bene (if it's a friend, or relative)

japanese Kimi o ai shiteru

japanese Watakushi-wa anata-wo ai shimasu

javanese Kulo tresno

kannada Naanu Ninnanu Preethisuthene

kannada Naanu Ninnanu Mohisuthene

kiswahili Nakupenda

klingon qabang

klingon qaparHa' (depends where in the galaxy you are)

korean Tangsinul sarang ha yo

persian Tora dost daram

polish Kocham Cie

polish Ja cie kocham

portuguese Amo-te

portuguese (brazilian) Eu te amo

punjabi Mai taunu pyar karda.

romanian Te iu besc

russian Ya vas liubliu

russian ya liubliu tebia

russian ya tebia liubliu

russian Ya polyubeel tebya.

scot Gaelic Tha gra\dh agam ort

serbian LUBim te.

serbocroatian volim te

shona Ndinokuda

sinhalese Mama oyata adarei

sioux Techihhila

slovak lubim ta

slovene ljubim te

spanish Te quiero

spanish Te amo

srilankan Mama Oyata Arderyi

swahili Naku penda (followed by the person's name)

swedish Jag a"lskar dig

swiss-German Ch'ha di ga"rn

syrian/Lebanes BHEBBEK (to a female)

syrian/Lebanes BHEBBAK (to a male)

tagalog Mahal kita

tamil Ni yaanai kaadli karen (You love me)

tamil n^An unnaik kAthalikkinREn (I love you)

tcheque MILUJI TE^

telugu Neenu ninnu pra'mistu'nnanu

telugu/india Nenu Ninnu Premistunnanu

thai Ch'an Rak Khun

thai Phom Rak Khun

tunisian Ha eh bak *

turkish Seni seviyo*rum (o* means o)

ukrainian ja tebe koKHAju (real true love)

ukrainian ja vas koKHAju

ukrainian ja pokoKHAv tebe

ukrainian ja pokoKHAv vas

urdu Mujhe tumse mohabbat hai

vietnamese Em ye^u anh (woman to man)

vietnamese Toi yeu em

vietnamese Anh ye^u em (man to woman)

vlaams Ik hue van ye

vulcan Wani ra yana ro aisha

welsh 'Rwy'n dy garu di.

welsh Yr wyf i yn dy garu di (chwi)

yiddish Ich libe dich

yiddish Ich han dich lib

yugoslavian Ya te volim

zazi Ezhele hezdege (sp?)

zuni Tom ho' ichema

zulu Ngiyakuthanda!

2007-01-31 04:39:52 · answer #5 · answered by natasha * 4 · 3 0

French - Je t'aime. I've found that there's no exact translation for the 'Je' sound in English, it's a softer sound than the English 'J' and is said with the teeth touching. t'aime is a lot easier, it's pronounced 'tem'.

2007-01-31 04:36:38 · answer #6 · answered by elflaeda 7 · 0 0

'Dwi'n dy garu di....Welsh

Dween dugh gary dee. Emphasis on the garu.

If you were speaking to ,say your Gran you 'd say

'Dwi'n eich caru chi.

Dween eich karry chi. (ch as in the Scottich 'loch')

As in some answers " 'Rwy'n dy garu di" is correct but a tad formal between lovers.

"Yr wyf i yn dy garu di" is much too formal and would not be used in real life.

2007-02-02 05:05:31 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Ich liebe dich (German) similar to [is lee-beh dis] but its not s's
Minä rakastan sinua (Finnish) [meen-a] as in apple [rah-cust-uhn seeooah]
Te quiero (Spanish) [te kee-erow]
Je t'aime (French) similar to [dshuh tame]

2007-02-03 16:11:12 · answer #8 · answered by profound insight 4 · 0 0

Portuguese: Eu te amo.
Spanish - Yo te amo/Yo te quiero.
Italian - Io te voglio bene.

2007-01-31 04:45:53 · answer #9 · answered by Karla 3 · 0 0

Language - YORUBA (Largest tribe in South West Nigeria, spoken in most West African countries)

Translation - MO NI IFE RE

Pronunciation

MO - as in Mongolia - pronounced without the “ngolia”

NI - as in Niece – pronounced without the “ece”

IFE -( I pronounced HE). FE as in FED (Pronounced without D)

RE - as in RED (Pronounced without D)

2007-01-31 05:26:07 · answer #10 · answered by B J 1 · 0 0

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