my dearest darling, I love you a lot.
I no longer love you or I don't love you any moremay be English equivalents of 'Je ne vous aime plus'. The subject pronoun 'je' means 'I'. The adverb phrase 'ne...plus'means 'not'. The personal pronoun 'vous' means 'you'. The verb 'aime' means [I] am loving, do love, love'. All together, they're pronounced 'zhuhn voo-zehm plyoo'.
The sentence doesn't make sense. Translated literally, it means: I love you cannot more stupid or I love you can no longer stupid The beginning of the sentence is in the first person singular, but the "peut" is third person singular.
I love you from with all my heart, but I don't know what i will do, Jane loves you, I don't now what i can do more.
Satellite Television Asian Region plus
Yes, you can start a sentence with the word plus (as a noun or adjective, not as a verb). Examples: Noun: Plus is the sign of addition. Noun: Plus is the only entry I want to see on my savings account. Adjective: Plus signs after the A were spread across the top of my math test!
je vous aime plus que vous= I love you more than you.
"encore plus" or "beaucoup plus"
"qui aime le plus l'école ?" means "who likes school best?" in French.
beaucoup plus
qui vous fait aime plus?
Et beaucoup plus de reine.
joyeux anniversaire et beaucoup plus
No way. I love you most.
more dear than
speak French or else I don't love you no more
I no longer love you or I don't love you any moremay be English equivalents of 'Je ne vous aime plus'. The subject pronoun 'je' means 'I'. The adverb phrase 'ne...plus'means 'not'. The personal pronoun 'vous' means 'you'. The verb 'aime' means [I] am loving, do love, love'. All together, they're pronounced 'zhuhn voo-zehm plyoo'.
"je vous aime plus que n'importe quoi"