Me, mi ed io may be Italian equivalents of 'Me, myself, and I'. The personal pronoun 'me' means 'me'. The reflexive 'mi', which also may be a personal pronoun meaning 'me', means 'myself'. The conjunction 'ed' means 'and'. The subject pronoun 'io' means 'I'. All together, they're pronounced 'meh mee eh-DEE-oh'.
"I love myself!" in English is Io amo me stesso! in Italian.
"I hate myself because of you!" in English is Mi odio per causa tua! in Italian.
Mi trovavo in Italian means "I was finding myself" in English.
"I love myself, my love!" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Mi amo, mi'amore! The declarative/exclamatory statement also translates into English as "I do love myself, my love!" The pronunciation will be "mee A-mo mee-a-MO-rey" in Italian.
Mi chiamo... is an Italian equivalent of the incomplete English phrase "My name is... ." The first person singular reflexive pronoun and present indicative translate literally as "I call myself..." in English. The pronunciation will be "mee KYA-mo" in Italian.
"To delete myself" is an English equivalent of the Italian word cassarmi. The term represents the combination of the present infinitive cassare ("to annul," "to cross out," "to delete," "to repeal") with the first person singular reflexive pronoun mi ("myself"). The pronunciation will be "kas-SAR-mee" in Italian.
Je m'aime! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I love me!" The declarative/exclamatory sentence also translates into English as "I love myself!" The pronunciation will be "zhuh mem" in Italian.
"I myself" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Io mi. The phrase also translates literally as "I, me" in English. The pronunciation will be "EE-o mee" in Pisan Italian.
Ciao! Mi chiamo Luca! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Hello! I am Luke!" The declarations also translate literally as "Hi! I call myself Luke!" or "Hi! I name myself Luke!" in English. The pronunciation will be "tchow mee KYA-mo LOO-ka" in Pisan Italian.
"To lay myself down" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian word sdraiarmi. The word merges a present infinitive with the first person reflexive pronoun. The pronunciation will be "sdreye-AR-mee" in Italian.
Mi chiamo Emma is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "My name is Emma." The declarative statement translates literally as "I call myself Emma" in English. The pronunciation will be "mee KYA-mo EM-ma" in Italian.
Amo divertirmi! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I love to have fun!" The declarative/exclamatory sentence translates literally into English as "I do love to entertain myself!" The pronunciation will be "A-mo DEE-ver-TEER-mee" in Italian.