tee AH-moh Dee BEH-neh is an Italian pronunciation of 'Ti amo di bene'. The personal pronoun 'ti' means 'you'. The verb 'amo' means '[I] am loving, do love, love'. The preposition 'di' means 'of, from'. The adverb 'bene' means 'fine, good, well'. All together, it tends to be translated as 'I love you very much'. But it isn't a standard way of expressing the feeling.
Ti amo, mamma! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I love you, Mamma!" The declarative/exclamatory statement also translates as "I do love you, Mom (Mommie, Mum, Mummie)!" in English. The pronunciation will be "tee A-mo MAM-ma" in Italian.
"EE-o A-mo man-DJA-rey eel TCHEE-bo EE-ta-LYA-no" is the way to pronounce the Italian phrase Io amo mangiare il cibo italiano!
Ti amo Ti voglio bene
They both mean 'I love you.' Te amo is in Spanish. Ti amo is in Italian.
io ti amo ( sweethearts) Ti voglio bene (the others)
"Now eat! Who eats well lives well. I love you!" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Mangiare adesso! Chi mangia bene viva bene. Ti amo!Specifically, the present infinitive mangiare is "to eat". The adverb bene means "fine, good, well". The relative pronoun chi means "who". The verb mangia means "doest eat, eats, is eating" in this context. The verb viva means "does live, is living, lives" in this context. The personal pronoun ti means "(informal singular) you". The verb amotranslates as "(I) am loving, do love, love".The pronunciation will be "mahn-DJAH-rey ah-DESH-soh KEE MAHN-djah BEY-ney VEE-vah BEY-ney tee AH-moh" in Italian.
ti amo per sempre (pronounce tee amo per sem-pray)
It means "I Love You" in Italian.
Bambino, ti amo! in Italian means "I love you, baby!" in English.
"I love you" and "I love you all" are English equivalents of the Italian phrase Vi amo. The pronunciation of the phrase -- whose feminine/masculine object pronoun may refer formally to one person or informally to more than one -- will be pronounced "vee A-mo" in Italian.
"Tee A-mo" is a way to pronounce the Italian phrase Ti amo. The two words may be translated literally into English as "I'm loving you," "I am loving you," "I do love you," or "I love you" according to context. They showcase two features which distinguish Italian from English: the subject pronoun io("I") need not begin the phrase -- other than for emphasis -- since context and verb endings make the speaker clear; and the second person informal singular pronoun ti ("you") verifies that the listener counts among the speaker's close circle of family, friends, and peers.
Ti amo, mia nipote! and Ti amo, nipote mia! are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "I love you, my granddaughter!" Context makes clear whether the fact that listener and speaker are related (case 1) or the nature of that relationship (example 2) is being stressed. The respective pronunciations will be "tee A-mo MEE-a nee-PO-tey" and "tee A-mo nee-PO-tey MEE-a" in Italian.