¡Te amo, tesoro mío! is a Spanish equivalent of the Italian phrase Ti amo, tesoro mio! The second person informal singular pronoun, present indicative in the first person singular, and masculine singular noun and possessive translate literally into English as "I love you, my treasure!" The respective pronunciations will be "tey A-mo tey-SO-ro MEE-o" in Spanish and "tee A-mo tey-ZO-ro MEE-o" in Italian.
Io ti amo! is an Italian equivalent of the Spanish phrase ¡Yo te amo! Both statements translate as "I love you!" in English. The respective pronunciation will be "EE-o tee A-mo" in Pisan Italian and "sho tey A-mo" in Uruguayan Spanish.
They both mean 'I love you.' Te amo is in Spanish. Ti amo is in Italian.
"I love you too" in Spanish is commonly translated as "Yo tambiΓ©n te amo". "Te amo" on its own means "I love you" in Spanish.
Well, for starters, te amo is Spanish, not Italian. And secondly, it means "I love you".
'te amo' in both languages, also 'te quiero' in Spanish
Te amo is a Spanish equivalent of the Italian phrase Ti amo. The personal pronoun in the second person informal singular and the present indicative verb in the first person singular translate into English as "I love you." The respective pronunciation will be "tey A-mo" in Italian and "tee A-mo" in Spanish.
Well, for starters, te amo is Spanish, not Italian. And secondly, it means "I love you".
I love you, my wife.
Answer I believe this is Italian and in English it means "I love everything about you". Several artists have recorded songs named Amo Tutto Di Te.
Te, amor! in Portuguese and Spanish is "You, love!" in English and Te, amore! in Italian.
Spanish for i love you. Me amo. Te quiero.
I love you Translated: Te amo Te quiero Te adoro Either ones work.