"I hate it" or "I hate you".
You probably mean Dai Ni, which means Number Two.
it means Japanese first
ダイアン /dai an/.
Different meanings like ' substitute, or plateau or ground '. If you heard ' dai ichi' it means 'first, number one' and such.
大 (dai) - great台 (dai) - stand, table代 (dai) - generation
The Hebrew phrase "עד בלי די" means "with no limit" or "endless" in English
It could have lots of meanings. Most commonly its just a 'counter', you could say it means 'number' in English. 'Dai ichi', could mean '.... number one', where just about anything could go in the blank. Another common usage of 'dai' is as an affix. It suggests 'largeness, intensity, etc'. 'Mondai' means problem, where 'daimondai' means a big problem. Of course different meanings mean different words too, they are just pronounced the same, 'dai'.
dayenu (×“×™×™× ×•) is one word. It means "enough for us".
GiornoGiorno is an Italian equivalent of the English word "day".Specifically, the word is a masculine noun in its singular form. It may be preceded by the masculine singular definite article il ("the") or the masculine singular indefinite article un ("a"). The pronunciation will be "DJOR-no" in Italian.
Written: u chi small yuSpoken: Uchu
Dai means "Great, Large"
Mi piace quando dai ordini is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I like it when you give orders."Specifically, the pronoun mi means "to me." The verb piace means "(it) is likable/pleasing" in this context. The conjunction quando means "when." The verb dai means "(informal singular you) are giving, do give, give." The feminine noun ordini means "orders."The pronunciation is "mee PYAH-tcheh KWAHN-doh deye* OHR-dee-nee."*The sound is similar to that in the English noun "eye."