"Ta tu ceart" is an Irish phrase that translates to "You are right" in English. It is used to affirm someone's statement or opinion, indicating agreement or correctness.
"Ta you ag leamh" is Irish Gaelic for "You are reading." It combines the verb "ta" (are), "you" (you), and "ag leamh" (reading). This phrase is used to indicate that someone is currently engaged in the act of reading.
ta douleur is 'your pain' (when physical), 'your sorrow, your ordeal' when mental.
Ok, accepted.
In your life.
good morning
Que ta chendo
Tarantallegra is pronounced as "ta-ran-ta-le-gra", with emphasis on the second syllable.
It makes no sense. "Tá grá agam" means "I love" "madra fear" means "men's dog"
Google translate says "I hope to soon" Irish Gaelic
Per sempre grata in the feminine and per sempre grato in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "forever grateful."Specifically, the preposition per is "for." The adverb sempre means "always." The feminine singular adjective grata and the masculine singular grato translate as "grateful."The respective pronunciation will be "per SEM-prey GRA-ta" in the feminine and "per SEM-prey GRA-to" in the masculine.
"You" is not Irish Gaelic. "Tá tú i rang a sé" would translate "You are in class six". Google translation?
"The gravity of love" is a literal English equivalent of la gravità di amore. The feminine definite article and noun, preposition, and masculine singular noun translate literally into English as "the burden (seriousness, weight) of love." The pronunciation will be "la GRA-vee-TA dee a-MO-rey" in Italian.
Tá úll aige" means "He has an apple"
"Ta tu ceart" is an Irish phrase that translates to "You are right" in English. It is used to affirm someone's statement or opinion, indicating agreement or correctness.
Grazie e fantastico! is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Thank you and fantastic!" The pronunciation will be "GRA-tsyey fan-TA-stee-ko" in Italian.
This means: the dog writes many novels