Ti amo molto is an Italian equivalent of '[I] love you much'. The personal pronoun 'ti' means 'you'. The verb 'amo' means '[I] am loving, do love, love'. The adverb 'molto' means 'much, lots, a lot'. All together, they're pronounced 'tee AH-moh MOHL-toh'.
Molta felicita a te is an Italian equivalent of 'Much happiness to you'. The feminine adjective 'molta' is pronounced 'MOHL-tah', and means 'much'. The feminine gender noun 'felicita' is pronounced 'feh-lee-chee-TAH', and means 'happiness'. The preposition 'a' is pronounced 'ah', and means 'to'. The personal pronoun 'te' is pronounced 'tay', and means 'you'.
Ciao alla tua famiglia! and Ciao alla vostra famiglia! are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "Hello to your family!" Context makes clear whether the feminine singular greeting addresses the family of one "you" (case 1) or two or more "you all" (example 2). The respective pronunciation will be "tchow AL-la TOO-a fa-MEE-lya" and "Tchow AL-la VO-stra fa-MEE-lya" in Italian.
tanta felicità a te e alla tua bella ragazza
A (to) tutta (all) la (article) mia (my) famiglia (family)
Note that 'famiglia' is a feminine noun. Therefore the words 'tutta', the article and the pronoun all take a feminine form.
Molto amore a lei e la sua famiglia.
grazie amore
Noi ti amiamo.
"I love these pictures! Thank you!" in English is Amo queste immagini! Grazie! in Italian.
To say "thank you for your love" in Igbo, you can say "Imela nke mmadu".
In Shangaan, you can say "Ndza khensa" to express thank you very much.
Grazie
tujeje mula
ringrazio tutto è bello
You can say "Asante, penzi" in Swahili to express "thank you, love".
As an Italian I would not say it is sacred, however, we do love our pasta!As an Italian I would not say it is sacred, however, we do love our pasta!As an Italian I would not say it is sacred, however, we do love our pasta!As an Italian I would not say it is sacred, however, we do love our pasta!As an Italian I would not say it is sacred, however, we do love our pasta!As an Italian I would not say it is sacred, however, we do love our pasta!
"Thank you to our parents for your love and support!" in English means Grazie ai nostri genitori per l'amore e il sostegno!in Italian.
Grazie, innamorato.
grazie per l'informazione
Grazie, amore mio! is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Thank you, my love!"Specifically, the interjection grazie is "thank you, thanks". The masculine noun amore means "love". The masculine possessive adjective mio translates as "my".The pronunciation will be "GRA-tsye a-MO-re MEE-o" in Italian.