You probably mean Dai Ni, which means Number Two.
"I hate it" or "I hate you".
ダイアン /dai an/.
it means Japanese first
Qingzhong Dai has written: 'Ying Han, Han Ying shui lun ji ci dian =' -- subject(s): Chinese language, Chinese, Hydraulic turbines, English, Dictionaries, English language
On this festive, Night of Hanukkah We remember days of long ago, So together, Light the candles, Share the warmth of the fire lights glow, Winter night.. candle light Moments we will long remember, Stories told, For all to share. Songs and laughter fill the air- Dai dai dai Diggah dai dai dai dai dai dai dai dai dai dai dai digga dai dai dai dai dai dai dai And we celebrate dance and sing on this cold mid winter night Friends and family Gather here On this festival of light (repeat of dai's x2)
Jichi Huang has written: 'A research guide to English translation of Chinese verse' -- subject(s): Chinese poetry, Indexes, Quan Tang shi, Translations into English 'Xian dai hua, xian dai xing, xian dai wen xue' -- subject(s): Chinese literature, History and criticism, Theory
The Hebrew phrase "עד בלי די" means "with no limit" or "endless" in English
de zaigaidelo kaleeza dai mubarak sha
You can say "คุณพูดภาษาอังกฤษได้หรือไม่?" (pronounced: kun poot saa ang-grit dai mai) which translates to "Can you speak English?" in Thai.
"Male red-haired singer" in English is maschio cantante dai capelli rossi in Italian.
Firstly... / First of all... Number one. The first one. Coloquially: The best one.