yours, love
amo (spanish)
They both mean 'I love you.' Te amo is in Spanish. Ti amo is in Italian.
The Spanish phrase "te amo" translates to "I love you" in English.
"Yours, but I love you!" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Di te, ma ti amo! The phrase also translates as "About you, but I love you!" or "Of you, but I love you!" according to English contexts. The pronunciation will be "dee tey ma tee A-mo" in Pisan Italian.
The Latin phrase for "I love you" is "te amo."
May victory be yours
"mater te amo cum angelis et pueris"phrase.- I love you with the angels and the mother of the young men
Te amo.
Translation: I love your smile = amo tu sonrisa
This is the phrase "as you like it" as mangled by an online English-to-Latin translator. It actually means "As I like you he".
Nayeli is not Spanish. It is a Zapotec (native Mexican tribe) phrase meaning "I love you." "I love you" in Spanish is "Te amo".
No translation found 'Mucho te amo, tomas' = 'I love you a lot, Thomas'
The phrase 'Yours Truly' is an expression, and though some choose to take it as a literal phrase, in actuality it is used to refer to yourself.