You need to provide more information. It depends on the subject of the sentence:
I (male) love my family = ani ohev et mishpakhti (×× ×™ ×והב ×ת משפחתי)
I (female) love my family = ani ohevet et mishpakhti (×× ×™ ×והבת ×ת משפחתי)
They love my family = hem ohavim et mishpakhti (×”× ××•×”×‘×™× ×ת משפחתי)
ahava bishvil habanim sheli (×הבה בשביל ×”×‘× ×™× ×©×œ×™)
If you are a woman, you would say ani ohevet et avi (×× ×™ ×והבת ×ת ×בי)
If you are a man, you would say ani ohev et avi (×× ×™ ×והב ×ת ×בי)
A male says: Ani ohev otkha, bni (××?×™ ×והב ×ותך, ב×?×™)
A female says: Ani ohevet otkha, bni (××?×™ ×והבת ×ותך, ב×?×™)
my son = bni (×‘× ×™)
Dear son in Hebrew is Ben Yakar (בן יקר)
"b'NEE"
ben - בן
The Hebrew word for "love" is "ahava," pronounced "a-ha-VAH."
"b'NAY ... "
i love you my son
Abraham's son = ben Avraham (בן אברהם)
Great, my son = יופי, בני (yofi, bni)
There is no such concept as "son-ship" in Hebrew. You would just say children: yeladim (ילדים)
ben ru'akh (בן רוח)
ahava po (אהבה פה)
The Hebrew word for "son" is ben.The Hebrew suffix denoting "his" is -o.The Hebrew word for "his son" would have been beno (with the stress on the final syllable), but the "e" in benbecomes a schwa, and what you get therefore is b'no. (In informal modern Hebrew, the schwa is frequently dropped altogether, and what you then get is just bno.)