You wrote the question in English and I don't even know what you're saying.
You don't know what I am saying in urda
Assuming you are saying this to someone you know well, it would be "te extraño".
it is for sure fourteen i dont know why people would be saying nine
If you are saying "I am happy," you would use ureshii, or if you are saying happiness, you would say "shiawase"
Saying it doesn't prove much; he could say it without meaning it, or do it without saying it, but if he doesn't show it, then he doesn't love you in any meaningful way.
i just know how to say i love you shataya
The verb tener means to have in Spanish If you are saying He has you would say "Él tiene.." If you are saying I have you would say "Tengo..." You have would be "Tú tienes.." They have would be "Ellos tienen..." (L's are pronunced as a y) We have would be "Nosotros tenemos..."
You can say change in Chinese by saying bianhua. You can say change in Hungarian by saying valtozas. In Armenian to say change you would say p'vop'vookhut'yun.
in simple dari it would be, roshanee (light of) mahtaub (moon). I don't know if there is a more formal way of saying it.
If you are saying the number alone, then you would say, "Un." If you are saying that there is one of something, and the thing is masculine, you would also say, "un". However, if the thing is feminine, you would say, "une".
entiendo lo que dices
Inference is when someone very subtly says something, without actually saying it, like, "anyone with half a brain would know Lansing is the capitol of Michigan" in front of someone who did not know, who would then say, "are you inferring that I am stupid?" ... to suggest .... without saying so. That's inference.