Well, I'm not exactly sure because Creole is a pidgin language that originated from several other languages; the most notable being French and Spanish. Though, there are Portuguese-based creole, Dutch-based creole, and German-based creole languages among others. I guess, if I were the person asking the question: "How do you say 'I will always love you' in Creole" I would first narrow down which Creole parent language, whether it be French/Spanish, etc, they are interested in and then go from there. Though, I do know how to say 'I love you' in French. It's ' Je t'aime'. Maybe someone else can provide a better, more informed answer to the original question. ~Ami
"ഞാൻ ലഞ്ച് നേടണോ" (Njan lunch nāṭaṇō) would be the closest translation for "Let's go for lunch" in Malayalam.
lets go private
You say "Lets go!" in Maasai language of the African origin as "Maape!".
allons-y France allons-y
"Ας πάει"
"പോവുക (pōvuka)" is how you say "let's go" in Malayalam.
"Chodźmy" is a common way to say "let's go" in Polish.
"Hup Holland" if u wana say lets go Holland in terms of the World Cup
say lets not play games lets go outside
Vamos a jugar!
"chodzmy do klasy"