It's Irish and would roughly sound like 'leh muh ghrawssa mishi oggus
lumsa muh ghraw'. (I am my beloved's and my beloved is mine).
the h sound is not a pretty sound but not many would notice if you didn't put it in. It's also very hard to explain (throaty)
The easiest way to explain it is to say muh graw
Le mo ghrasa mise agus liomsa mo ghra
Le mo ghrasa mise, agus liomsa mo ghra
According to the predictably unreliable Google translator it mean 'You love me'.The actual translation should be 'Tá grá agat dom'. Irish is too idiomatic formachine translation.
"Cén fáth a bhfuil mise agus tusa ag caint Fraincis agus Spáinnis" means "Why are we talking French and Spanish?"
Meez-on-scen
In Irish, Le mo ghrá-sa mise, agus liomsa mo ghrá. In Scots Gaelic:
'Moyori no mise WA doko desu ka?'
The correct spelling is "Mise en place". Pronounced: mi-z' an pla-s' "Mise" is the feminin form of the world. The masculin form is "Mis" pronounced: mî
The sentence doesn't make sense. "Is é mo ainm Kara" doesn't mean "My name is Kara", "agus mé ag labhairt Gaeilge" doesn't mean "and I'm speaking Irish". There are a few ways to say "My name is": Kara atá orm (Kara ataw urrum) Kara is ainm dom (Kara iss anim dum) Is mise Kara (iss misha Kara) "and I'm speaking Irish" is "agus tá mé ag caint i nGaeilge" (oggus taw may egg coinch n-wale-ga)
The kanji for mise is店.
mise à jour
Koji Mise was born in 1976.
Mamiko Mise is 170 cm.