no bebé
You and me together forever my love in spanish is: tu y yo juntos para siempre mi amor
In Spanish, "babe girl" can be translated as "chica bebé" or "nena".
Piccola, sei splendida! is just one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Babe, you are stunning!" The pronunciaton of the feminine singular phrase -- which translates literally as "Little one, you are splendid!" -- will be "PEEK-ko-la SEH-ee SPLEN-dee-da" in Italian.
Ciao, bimba! in the feminine and Ciao, bimbo!in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "Hey, babe!" The respective pronunciations will be "tchow* BEEM-ba" in the feminine and "tchow BEEM-bo" in the masculine.*The sound is similar to that in the English noun "chow."
from spanish - babe
You mean Babe as in cute girl ? There is no slang for babe in Japanese but a cute girl would be called a Kawaii (Cute) Onna (girl) or Onnanoko
"Babe" is an English equivalent of the Italian word bambino in the mixed English and Italian phrase, the Great Bambino. The masculine singular noun in question most famously references one of the nicknames for Major League baseball player George Herman "Babe" Ruth, Jr. (February 6, 1895 - August 16, 1948). The pronunciation will be "bam-BEE-no" in Italian.
I love you too, babe is the correct phrase
IT CAN BE TRANSLATED TO ENGLISH AS FOLLOWED. Hey nene, how are you?
Te amo demasiado, menina! is a Portuguese equivalent of the English phrase "I love you too much, babe!" The declaration translates literally as "I love you excessively, girl!" or "I love you so much, girl!" in English. The pronunciation will be "TCHA-moo DJEE-ma-ZYA-doo muh-NEE-nuh" in Cariocan Brazilian and in continental Portuguese.
Ti amo, bimba! in the feminine and Ti amo, bimbo!in the masculine are literal Italian equivalents of the English phrase "I love you, babe!" The feminine singular noun bimbaand the masculine singular noun bimbo also translate into English as "baby" or "infant." The respective pronunciations will be "tee A-mo BEEM-ba" in the feminine and "tee A-mo BEEM-bo" in the masculine in Italian.
"what are you doing Baby", or more accurately "wat you doin' Babe"