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)
The Latin phrase for "I love you" is "te amo."
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").
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'.
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.