"Eu também."
It means "It is badass but I know that I am also."
I like juice Manzano and I love my girlfriend and I do speak portuguese puedo
"Eu estou pensando em você também" (that's the way brazilians speak, portuguese people like me say "Também estou a pensar em ti") means "I'm also thinking of you".
Yes, i speak English, Spanish and Portuguese, how are you.
"Eu" in Portuguese means "I" in English. It is a personal pronoun used to refer to oneself in the first person singular.
"Sim, eu faço."
The Portuguese equivalent of the English sentence 'I miss you too' is the following: Eu tambem, eu sinto falta de voce. The Portuguese pronunciation is the following: AY-oo tahm-BEHNG SEE-ntoo FOW*-tuh djee voh-SAY. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'eu' means 'I'; 'tambem' 'also' or 'too'; 'sinto' '[I] feel'; 'falta' absence' or 'lack'; 'de' 'from' or 'of'; 'voce' 'you'. *The sound is similar to the 'ow' in the English word 'how'. Brazilian Portuguese just uses voce for 'you'. But European, peninsular Portuguese also uses the 'you' [tu] of children and the close circle of family and friends. In Portugal, this situation calls for use of de ti, which is pronounced djee tchee, and which means 'of you'.
I is an English equivalent of 'Eu'.
Sim, Eu vou para Portugal este Verão.
If I Catch You
It's the first person pronoun, which translates into English as 'I'.