It is not good Irish. "Daor" means "dear" as in expensive. The adjective would follow the noun in any case, more like "deirfiúr dhíl".
Erella Daor has written: 'Variations in the importance of walking as a mode of transport' -- subject(s): Choice of transportation, Pedestrians, Walking
Grá (love) tú (you) ró-daor[ró-dhaor] (too precious/dear/enslaved/guilty).Not really a sentence.
If you mean "deirfiur", is the word for sister in the Irish language.
It means "are you? " In French Ex: Es tu ici? Are you here?
In Irish it's: sclábhaí / tráill/ daor
"Tu tienes" in English means "you have."
"Tu perro" means "your dog" in English.
Tu means you (singular and informal)
As written, "tu y tu" means "your and yours". "Tú y tu" means "you and yours". "Tú y tú" means "you and you." The accents in Spanish are very important if you want to get your point across in writing.
the question answer is you want to play on/with your computer the tu means you, aimes means want, jouer means play, `a means on ,l`ordinateur means computer
it means love you. Mi encanta tu means I love you.
in french it means are you... when asking a question... eg es-tu en forme?