"May God Protect You"
Qualcuno ti ama in Italian means "Someone loves you" in English.
Che Dio ti benedica. "Dio la benedica". "Dio la benedica".
Vieni qua, bella! Dio, ti voglio! in Italian means "Come here beautiful! god, I want you!" in English.
che Dio ti guida e ti protegge
(Él) me quiere/ama a mi, no a ti.
Ti amo anch'io, amore.
Tu ami Dio! and Voi amate Dio! are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "You love God!" Context makes clear whether one informal "you" (case 1) or two or more "you all" (example 2) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "too A-mee DEE-o" and "voy a-MA-tey DEE-o" in Pisan Italian.
'DEE-oh tee BEH-neh-DEE-kah' is how you pronounce 'Dio ti benedica', which is Italian for 'God bless you'.
God, how I love you is a literal English equivalent of 'Dio, come ti amo'. A looser translation may be more along the lines of 'God, I really love you'. The masculine noun 'Dio' means 'God'. The adverb 'come' means 'how'. The personal pronoun 'ti' means 'you'. The verb 'amo'means '[I] am loving, do love, love'. All together, they're pronounced 'DEE-oh KOH-meh tee AH-moh'.
"Someone loves you!" in English is Qualcuno ti ama! in Italian.
Don't cry over the person who doesn't love you, but rather love the person who cries over you.