Translation: I like/love you.
"I don't want to be without you"
Translated from the Greek, it means "what is that?".
An-ti-ke Fi-gu-re
te amo = I love you porque tu eres la Nina que robo mi corazon = because you're the girl who stole my heart y yo soy el nino de quien te estas enamorando = and I'm the boy with whom you're falling in love y las llaves de mi corazon* = and the keys to my heart soy para ti* = I'm yours te amo y te quiero = I love you If the phrase actually is, y las llaves de my corazon son para ti = the keys to my heart are yours, or here are your set of keys to my heart
"How are you?" is an English equivalent of the Greek phrase τί κάνεις? The question, Romanized as Ti kanis, translates literally as "What are you doing?" in English. The pronunciation will be "tee KA-nees" in Aeginan Greek.
Te Quiero A Ti was created on 1999-08-14.
Quiero que sepas que te quiero. No me olvidé de ti y siempre te voy a querer. Tu hermanita.
te amaré y pensaré en ti para siempre
I love you. Look what I have for you.
"Te quiero a ti tambien" means "I love you too" in Spanish. It is a way to express mutual feelings of love towards someone.
"Pero yo te quiero a ti" means "But I love you." On spanish we have two ways to say I love you. Pero yo te quiero a ti" literraly would be "but I want you' rahter than someone else.
"Te estoy hablando" or "Te estoy hablando a ti."
spero ti diverta/spero te lo goda
It can mean I love you, I like you, or I want you.
It means I do love you more! (:
I love you, but also my liberty.
'te amo' in both languages, also 'te quiero' in Spanish