Chee AH-moo is a Portuguese pronunciation of 'Te amo'. Teh AH-moh is a Spanish pronunciation. It also is a classical and liturgical Latin pronunciation. But whatever the language, the phrase means 'I love you'.
The language is Spanish, I think.
It is Spanish, but you probably mean "te amo", meaning "I love you."
Eu amo você, or Eu lhe amo, or Te amo or Eu amo tu.
To say the words 'I love you baby' in Latin you say 'Quis te amo'. In the Italian language these words are said as 'Ti amo piccola'.
"Te amo também" is how you say 'love you too' in Brazilian Portuguese.
Mexican is not a language."Te amo".
"Mexican" is not a language. In Spanish, "I love you" would be "te quiero" or "te amo".
Te amo Chupa Labios
They both mean 'I love you.' Te amo is in Spanish. Ti amo is in Italian.
Te amo is Spanish for I love you. In the Spanish, there are two ways to say "I love you", you can say "Te quiero" which is the version that you would use with friends and family members to signify that you care for them and then you can say "Te amo" when you propose to an individual.
"Te amo haere" is not a common phrase in any language that I am aware of. "Te amo" means "I love you" in Spanish and "haere" means "go" in Maori. It could be a combination of words from different languages with no specific meaning.
Te amo, sí = I love you, yes Te amo si = I love you if