Translation: Ice Tea
Love and ice cream is not something the Spanish would typically say in the same sentence, but literally translated it would be "Amas el helado?" More like they would "Te gusta el helado?" or "Te encanta el helado?"
Te helado
This ice cream
That's Spanish for "an ice cream".
eat ice cream with me
"El helado" means "the ice cream" in Spanish. It is pronounced "el ay-LA-doe". Please see the Related link below for confirmation of the translation.
nieve or helado
ice cream! yum :) We all scream for ice cream!!=) ;)
Helado also means ice
Usually this is expressed by the reflexive "gustarse", meaning "to be pleasing to oneself". In the singular, this is "le gusta..." or "te gusta..." depending on context. In the plural, it is "os gusta..." or "les gusta..." depending o context. Example: "¿Le gusta el helado?" - Do you (singular formal) like ice cream? "¿Te gusta el helado?" - Do you (singular informal) like ice cream? "¿Os gusta el helado?" - Do you (plural informal) like ice cream? "¿Les gusta el helado?" - Do you (plural formal) like ice cream? Interestingly, all the above have the same English translation "Do you like ice cream?" This is a good example of the precision used in everyday Spanish verbs in comparison to English. The downside is that the Spanish verb structure is enormously more complicated than the English counterpart.
to buy an ice-cream
Gelado