Pulchri- meaning beautiful, and tube meaning television, thus " nice looking TV" Hah. hah
te amo
Te amo.
The Latin equivalent of the English statement 'I miss you' is Te desidero. In the word-by-word translation, the personal pronoun 'te' means 'you'. The verb 'desidero' means '[I] am missing, do miss, miss'.
love = amor in Latin (not Roman)
One Latin eqivalent of the English phrase 'See you soon' is the following: Videbo te mox; or Videbo vos mox. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'videbo' means '[I] will see'; 'te' means 'you [singular]'; 'vos' means 'you all'; and 'mox' means 'soon'. Another Latin equivalent is the following: Spero te videre mox; or Spero vos videre mox. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'spero' means '[I] hope'; 'videre' means 'to see'.
This is a word-for-word translation into Latin of "I love you so much", but it is not actually a grammatical Latin sentence. A better translation would be Ut maxime te amo ("How very much I love you").
The Latin phrase for "I love you" is "te amo."
Iterum iterumque exsurge .............................
Latin
Nosce te ipsum is the Latin translation of Know thyself.
From Latin, statua, meaning image or a three dimensional work of art
The meaning of the Latin phrase 'amo te' is the following: I love you. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'amo' means '[I] love'; and 'te' means 'you'. The pronunciation is the following: AH-moo tay. The Latin language tends to place the verb at the end of the sentence. Therefore, a more Latin construction is as follow: 'te amo'. But either way is acceptable.