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How do you say 'live' and 'love' in different languages?
I need this for a project so ANY languages will be helpful. I need as many different languages as possible :D
Thank you.

2007-09-09 04:40:32 · 32 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Languages

32 answers

Catalan: viu i estima!=Live and love!
Spanish: ¡vive y ama!=Live and love!

Catalan: viure i estimar= to live and to love
Spanish: vivir y amar= to live and to love

2007-09-09 04:59:49 · answer #1 · answered by Jassy 7 · 0 0

Hey!! You want to know how to say live in love in other laguages...
SPANISH:
live- VIVIR
Love- AMORE
FRENCH:
live-resider
love- aimer
ITALIAN:
live- abitare OR vivere
love- amare
PORTUGESE:
live-vivo OR viver
love- amor
JAPENESE:
live- raivu OR raibu
love- koigokoro, ai, aijou, ji, ren'ai, aikou, suki, koi
SWEDISH:
live- leva OR vistas
love- kärlek
AFRICAN:
live- woon
love- mal wees oor, liefde, liefhê

Hope this helps! If your wondering why there are more than one meaning on some of them...sometimes they can have different meanings..just like in America....
if you would say: DOES JACK LIVE HERE? in comparison to THIS IS NO WAY TO LIVE! in another country..those two LIVES would be two different words

if you need other languages such as dutch, hungarian, idonesian, swahili, spanish, russian, ECT
go to this website:
http://www.freedict.com/onldict/afr.html

2007-09-09 04:54:11 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Well I love you in French is J'taime. And I love you in Hebrew is Ani ohev otach (obviously there are different hebrew letters but that is how you would pronounce it in our alphabet)

Good Luck.

Edit: if I were you I wouldn't trust everyone's answers. I lot of people have said to love in french is aimer which is the verb to like (adorer is the infinitive of to love) and some people said to live is resider which means to reside (like where you live, not the actual verb to live)

2007-09-09 04:44:55 · answer #3 · answered by cazdudet 5 · 0 0

Amore is Love in Italian

2007-09-09 04:44:37 · answer #4 · answered by David T 6 · 0 0

Lithuanian , one of the Indo - European languages.Lithuania is on the shore of the Baltic sea in Europe.
So , live - ( gy- ven- ti) g is pronounced like g , say, in the word ''green'', ok?
Love - ( my- le - ti) , which is a verb . The first syllable of it is pronounced like in an English word '' mi - racle''.
Thank you .

2007-09-16 03:14:45 · answer #5 · answered by Alina M 3 · 0 0

In Greek
live = ζω
love = αγαπώ (y sound the same as in the word "yello")

I hope I've helped you

2007-09-16 10:13:04 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Bosnian, Serbian and Croatian:
live = živjeti
love (verb) = voljeti
love (noun)= ljubav

2007-09-09 10:35:12 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Here is a link to Babelfish, an online translation utility.
You can use it to translate to a number of different languages.

http://babelfish.altavista.com/

2007-09-09 04:45:07 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

French: vivre/amour
Spanish: vivir/amor,amar
Dutch: huizen/beminnen
Japanese: raibu/koigokoro
Swedish: leva/kärlek
Italian: abitiamo,stare/amore, amare

2007-09-09 08:02:28 · answer #9 · answered by Steffy 1 · 0 0

live
japanese = ikiteiru (=be alive), seizonsuru (=exist), sumu (=reside)
italian = abitare (=reside)
french = habiter (=reside)
spanish = vivir (=reside)
german = wohnen (=reside)

love
japanese = ai
italian = amore
french = amour
spanish = amor
german = liebe

2007-09-09 11:49:28 · answer #10 · answered by askawow 47 7 · 0 0

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