It is a nonsense
La = the (one, female)
Ti= a te ( to you)
da is from but dà (dai) is give.
the?
Sean Kingston- letting go
Ti amo da morire in Italian means "I love you to death" in English.
Goodnight, Love you
The Icicles - An independent local band from GRAND RAPIDS, MI! http://www.theicicles.com/ http://www.myspace.com/theicicles
Especially for you, Sonia.
What is Jennifer Lopez of (or from) you?
"Noswaith dda i ti, cariad, dwy'n caru ti" Welsh for "Good evening (to you), sweetheart, I love you".
I'll go with you another time
=la la la la da la :D do re mi fa so la ti do hello=
It depends on what they were initially talking about. "La" in that sentence means "it" for a Spanish feminine noun. "Te" in that sentence means "to you". And "Da" means he or she gave. So altogether, it means He/She gave it to you.
"To you" is an English equivalent of the Portuguese and Spanish word a ti. The preposition and second person informal singular pronoun also translate literally into English as "at you." The pronunciation will be "a tchee" in Cariocan and continental Portuguese and "a tee" in Spanish.