Observe is a verb
Tamanui-te-rā.
Meteor has three syllables: Me - te - or.
.........Neil Armstrong..
a planet is 'une planète' (fem.) in French.
Around 6 billion years.
You is the English equivalent of 'te'. The word is in the singular form. It also is in its form as the direct object of the verb.
the correct form to say in spanish is: ¿de donde te conosco?, in English is where i you know? , where i you meet? where i you see? conosco is the verb conocer in English is know
'Matte' is the -te form conjugation of the verb 'matsu,' which means "to wait."
'Naotte' is the "-te" form of the verb 'naoru,' meaning "to be fixed/healed."
The correct spelling for "mi te" is "mite."
The accusative form of "you" in Latin is te in the singular and vos in the plural. This is the form used for the object of the verb, or the object of certain prepositions.
"Te hiamo a las 6" is written with a typo. The correct sentence would be "Te llamamos a las 6". In Spanish, it means "We will call you at 6."
It is the '-te' form of the verb 'naru,' which (among other meanings) means 'to become.'
This would not usually be used with the infinitive form of the verb. "Amar" is the Spanish verb meaning "to love". "Te" is the informal ojective pronoun for "you". The closest you could say is that this would mean "to love you". Normally, this would be used with a conjugated form of the verb, as in "te amo": "I love you".
latin is the same as spanish so its te odio Second answer: Firstly, Latin is NOT the same as Spanish, only similar. Secondly, 'odisse' - 'to hate' is a defective verb, meaning that it has no present form, only a perfect form with present meaning. The correct translation is 'te odi'.
as a question? do you like? gustar is the verb to like. te preceeding a verb is addressing the person you are speaking to.
This is not a grammatical sentence in Latin, because the pronoun ego ("I") and the verb amat ("loves") clash. If the intended meaning is "I love you", you should say just te amo, because the verb form amo includes the first-person subject "I".