It depends on the gender of the subject and the object:
I love you very much (male to male) = ani me'od ohev otcha.I love you very much (female to male) = ani me'od ohevet otcha.
I love you very much (female to female) = ani me'od ohevet otach.
I love you very much (male to female) = ani me'od ohev otach.
I love you very much (male to multiple males or to a mixed group) = ani me'od ohev etchem.
I love you very much (male to a group of females) = ani me'od ohev etchen.
I love you very much (female to multiple males or to a mixed group) = ani me'od ohevet etchem.
I love you very much (female to a group of females) = ani me'od ohevet etchen.
Harbe
I love you very very very very much
The Hebrew word for "love" is "ahava," pronounced "a-ha-VAH."
I love you very much: Je t'aime beaucoup. (friendship) I love you very much: Je t'aime (love)
First of all, there is only one Hebrew alphabet.Second, This phrase is the same in both Biblical Hebrew and Modern Hebrew.I love you very much:male to male: aní me'ód ohév otchá (אני מאוד אוהב אותך)female to male: aní me'ód ohévet otchá (אני מאוד אוהבת אותך)
Thank you very much, Daddy:תודה רבה, אבא Todáh rabáh, ábba
In Shangaan, you can say "Ndza khensa" to express thank you very much.
A simple "I love you" should be all that you need to say.
Depends on the context. If you want to say Thank you very much, that would be Toda Raba (תודה רבה), where the Raba means very much. But if you want to talk about a quantity of something which is very much, it would be described as "Harbey Me'od" (הרבה מאד).
The word Miod, or in Hebrew מאד
Jack is a short for Jackob, which in Hebrew is pronounced very much the same- Yhackov, יעקוב (written without the ו between the ק and the ב, because of the Hebrew Nickod=vowels)
Anhobbok Hafne