This is a word-for-word translation into Latin of "I love you so much", but it is not actually a grammatical Latin sentence. A better translation would be Ut maxime te amo ("How very much I love you").
I like = ego amo
Amorem is the Latin noun for" love", amo is the Latin verb "I love"(Ego) amo(tu) amas(*ei) amatamamusamatisamant
The Latin language is variously referred to in Latin: as Latinum, lingua Latina ("Latin tongue"), or just Latina (short for the preceding). To say "I love Latin" you would use the accusative (direct object) form of one of these plus the verb amo "I love":Amo LatinumAmo [linguam] LatinamYou could also say Ego amare Latine
multus, multa, multum
This is not a grammatical sentence in Latin, because the pronoun ego ("I") and the verb amat ("loves") clash. If the intended meaning is "I love you", you should say just te amo, because the verb form amo includes the first-person subject "I".
How do you say "Yo tambien te amo" in English? I love you too. (I too you love)
Te amo. P.S. Puerto Rico is an island not a language ;), in Puerto Rico people speak spanish and english so you could say it in english and there will be no problem!
"Ego" means "I" in Latin. Similarly, in English, a person's ego refers to their sense of self-inflated pride over their superiority over others.
"Hola senor" means "hello sir, or hello mister" and te amo means "i love you"
Te amo
It means "I am a story." If one desired to say, "I am fabulous," on the other hand, one would say, "(Ego) mirabilis sum."
You could say it means "I love you, silly".