In Standard High German it's ich hab dich gern and means I like you.
The phrase is not German.
In Austria they speak German, so 'thank you' is 'Danke' (pronounced DANK - uh). To say 'thank you very much' you need to say 'Danke Schon' (there are two dots side by side over the 'o' called an 'umlaut'). This is pronounced 'DANK - uh - Shern'. Austrian is not a language.The official language of Austria is German.The German for "Thank you" is "Danke"... "Thank you very much" is "vielen Dank"
you can say i love you in Austrian by saying "I hab di gean"
The German abbreviation DI stands for Diplom Ingenieur which translates as Master of Engineering.
The phrase 'articoli di giornale' is an Italian phrase. When this Italian phase is translated into the English language, it simply means newspaper articles.
The Italian phrase articolo di giornale translated to English means newspaper article. Articolo di giornale can also be referred and translated to magazine.
"Of May" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase di maggio.Specifically, the preposition di means "in, of." The masculine noun maggio means "(the month of) May." The pronunciation is "dee MAHDJ-djyoh."
"Family's" or "of family" are English equivalents of the incomplete Italian phrase Di famiglia.Specifically, the preposition di is "of". The feminine noun famiglia means "family". The pronunciation will be "fah-MEE-lyah" in Italian.
This is a phrase, not a "who". It translates to "To remind you of Venice".
mushroom = Pilz
Of savings is an English equivalent of 'di risp'. The Italian phrase is a shortened, abbreviated form of 'di risparmio'. The preposition 'di' means 'of'. The masculine noun 'risparmio' means 'saving'. The abbreviation is pronounced 'dee reesp'. The complete phrase is pronounced 'dee ree-SPAHR-mee-oh'.
"Who is in your family?" is one English equivalent of the Welsh phrase Pwy sy yn dy deulu di?