"I love you, my love!" is an English equivalent of the Portuguese phrase Eu te amo, meu amor! Beginning the declaration with a pronoun serves to emphasize the speaker's commitment since Portuguese does not require it when context and verb endings make the subject clear. The pronunciation will be "EY-oo tchee A-moo MEY-oo uh-mooh" in Cariocan and continental Portuguese.
love = amor in Latin (not Roman)
I don't know what kind of words you are looking for but here are some words...Grandpa=vovô (vo-voh)Grandma=vovó (vo-vaw) (say ''vaw'' as you say in ''saw'')Girl-friend/Guy-friend=Amiga/AmigoMom/Dad=mãe/paiGuy cousin/Girl cousin=primo/primaI love you=Eu te amo(I hope that gave you a little sence of what the Portuguese language is.)
Amo-te
in spanish: Te amo bebe para siempre y siempre (always is the only word) in italian: Ti Amo bambino(a) per sempre e sempre
Know One Really Knows. But 3 famous people are Brittany Snow, Wallas Amo & Jim Morrison
Eu amo português is 'I love Portuguese' in Portuguese.
Eu te amo muito! in Portuguese means "I love you so much!" in English.
eu te amo
IT CAN BE TRANSLATED TO ENGLISH AS FOLLOWED. i really love nathanbarone
"Á eme o" translates as "H to O" in English. It is a way of spelling out the letters "H, M, and O" in the respective languages.
"Eu te amo, querido." (from woman to man) "Eu te amo, querida." (from man to woman) Babe/Baby can also be translated to "meu amor" (both genders; literally "my love", same meaning). "Eu te amo, meu amor."
the love = o amor I love = amo
Amo-te, meu amor.
It means 'I love you' although it's written incorrectly. A native speaker would write 'eu te amo', 'te amo', or 'amo-te'.
"To her, love" is an English equivalent of the awkwardly incomplete Spanish phrase Le, amor. The phrase also translates as "To him, love" in English. The pronunciation will be "ley a-MOR" in Uruguayan Spanish.
¡Feliz cumpleaños!
"I love" is an English equivalent of the Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish word Amo. The present indicative verb in the first person singular also translates into English as "I am loving, "I'm loving," and "I do love" according to context. The respective pronunciations will be "A-mo" in Italian and Spanish and "A-moo" in Portuguese.