sokka likes princess yue but she turned into the moon
Suki means to like. If you would like to emphasize suki you can add the word dai(very much) before suki.
suki desu if you want to say "I like [something]", then you say 'watashi/boku WA [something] ga suki desu or if [something] is already the subject then just suki desu, or if what you like or just you are the subject then [something] ga suki desu.
i think you mean suki, suki means like
suki! [object] ga suki = I like [object] x
What you typed isn't complete...but Kore(This) ga suki(Like) I... "like this"
"Suki Suki! I love my bitties"For an explanation of these urban terms, visit the following links:http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Suki+Sukihttp://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=bittiesI think suki means like as in "I like you". I don't know if saying it twice changes the whole meaning of it.
"Gojou" is likely a name and "suki" means "to like", so I'd surmise that "suki Gojou" is a broken way of saying they like a person named Gojou.
'Sore ga suki desu.'
Lina Sakka was born in 1976, in Kimi, Evia, Greece.
For "I like you" the closest equivalent is "suki desu". A little stronger version is "dai-suki" which is, "I like you a lot."
literally: watashi WA suki desu But this would be unusual in Japanese. More likely usage: [thing you like] suki desu, with "I" implied. For example, sushi suki desu.
Ahmed El Sakka was born on 1973-03-01.