"But I love you, sister" is an English equivalent of "Ma ti amo, sorella."
The conjunction "ma" means "but." The personal pronoun "ti" means "(informal singular second person) you." The feminine noun "sorella" means "sister." Its singular indefinite article is "la" ("the"), and its singular indefinite article is "una" ("a, one").
The pronunciation is "mah tee AH-moh soh-REHL-lah."
Ti amo was created in 1984.
for a man to a woman - Ti amo la mia cicina splendida other way around - Ti amo il mio cicino splendido
They both mean 'I love you.' Te amo is in Spanish. Ti amo is in Italian.
"I love you, my family!" in English is Ti amo, famiglia mia! in Italian.
"I love you, my Charlotte!" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian phrase Ti amo, Carlotta mia! The declarative statement is addressed in the friendly, informal second person singular "you." The pronunciation will be "tee A-mo kar-LOT-ta MEE-a" in Italian.
Ti amo, mia nipote! and Ti amo, nipote mia! are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "I love you, my granddaughter!" Context makes clear whether the fact that listener and speaker are related (case 1) or the nature of that relationship (example 2) is being stressed. The respective pronunciations will be "tee A-mo MEE-a nee-PO-tey" and "tee A-mo nee-PO-tey MEE-a" in Italian.
idk etier my self sorry i think you= ti sentence: sin ti amo
'I love you so much' is an English equivalent of 'Ti amo troppo'. It's pronounced 'tee AH-moh TROP-poh'. 'You're still my star' is an English equivalent of 'Sei anche la mia stella'. It's pronounced 'seh AHN-keh lah MEE-ah STEHL-lah'.
"Io ti amo e ti amerò" in italiano.
idk etier my self sorry i think you= ti sentence: sin ti amo
I love you, I love you is an English equivalent of 'Ti amo, ti amo'. The personal pronoun 'ti' means 'you'. The verb 'amo' means '[I] am loving, do love, love'. Together, they're pronounced 'tee AH-moh'.
"I love you, my beautiful girl!" in English is Ti amo, mia bella ragazza! in Italian.