Te amo e mi manchi moltissimo is an English equivalent of '[I] love and miss you lots'. The words in Italian are pronounced 'tay AH-moh ay mee MAHN-kee mohl-TEES-see-moh'.
In the word by word translation, the personal pronoun 'te' means 'you'. The verb 'amo' means '[I] am loving, do love, love'. The conjunction 'e' means 'and'. The personal pronoun 'mi' means 'me'. The verb 'manchi'means '[you] are missing or lacking to'. The adverb 'moltissimo' means 'lots'.
You can say "Ciao zio" in Italian to greet your uncle.
'Mi manca il mio amore' is an Italian equivalent of 'I miss my love'. The Italian phrase literally translates as 'My love is lacking, missing to me'. Oftentimes in conversational or poetic Italian, the phrase simplifies to 'Mi manca mi amore'.
Io ti amo e mi manchi. :D
As an Italian I would not say it is sacred, however, we do love our pasta!As an Italian I would not say it is sacred, however, we do love our pasta!As an Italian I would not say it is sacred, however, we do love our pasta!As an Italian I would not say it is sacred, however, we do love our pasta!As an Italian I would not say it is sacred, however, we do love our pasta!As an Italian I would not say it is sacred, however, we do love our pasta!
I love and miss you meko Je l'aime et que vous manquez meko
full love in Italian is "in pieno amore"
To say "I love you and miss you" to your grandmother in Tagalog, you can say "Mahal kita at miss na miss kita, Lola."
How do I say I miss talking to you In Palau?
i love milan
you say amo (a mo)
Amore
love