To clarify: I am looking for the one based on the verb Diligere, to esteem, NOT Amāre, to lust after, to like, to love, to befriend.
The Latin phrase for "I love you" is "te amo."
Te amo.
The phrase isn't "veni, veni, veni". Instead it is the Latin phrase "veni, vidi, vici" which translated means "I came, I saw, I conquered". It is first attributed to Julius Caesar.
Nimbus amoris.
Semper amor.
i love turtles
Well the -christ- part means Jesus and mas means love in latin so all together it means Jesus love
"Jesu Christe" is a phrase that is written in Latin, which translates to "Jesus Christ" in English.
The English phrase "angel of love" has a very obvious Latin translation. In Latin it becomes the phrase "Angelus ex amore".
Semper amo is "I always love"; Semper te amo is "I always love you"; Semper te amabo is "I will always love you".
Ti amo, Gesù! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I love you, Jesus!" The declarative/exclamatory statement also translates literally as "I do love you, Jesus!" in English. The pronunciation will be "tee A-mo djey-ZOO" in Italian.
Ievs nazarevs rex iudea in latin but in English is Jesus of nazareth king of the Jews