"Sim, eu também" translates to "Yes, me too" in English. It is used to express agreement or to indicate that one shares the same sentiment or experience as someone else.
eu tambem
It means "It is badass but I know that I am also."
I like juice Manzano and I love my girlfriend and I do speak portuguese puedo
"Eu estou pensando em você também" (that's the way brazilians speak, portuguese people like me say "Também estou a pensar em ti") means "I'm also thinking of you".
Yes, i speak English, Spanish and Portuguese, how are you.
"Eu" in Portuguese means "I" in English. It is a personal pronoun used to refer to oneself in the first person singular.
sim (s-E-m)
I is an English equivalent of 'Eu'.
The Portuguese equivalent of the English sentence 'I miss you too' is the following: Eu tambem, eu sinto falta de voce. The Portuguese pronunciation is the following: AY-oo tahm-BEHNG SEE-ntoo FOW*-tuh djee voh-SAY. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'eu' means 'I'; 'tambem' 'also' or 'too'; 'sinto' '[I] feel'; 'falta' absence' or 'lack'; 'de' 'from' or 'of'; 'voce' 'you'. *The sound is similar to the 'ow' in the English word 'how'. Brazilian Portuguese just uses voce for 'you'. But European, peninsular Portuguese also uses the 'you' [tu] of children and the close circle of family and friends. In Portugal, this situation calls for use of de ti, which is pronounced djee tchee, and which means 'of you'.
If I Catch You
It's the first person pronoun, which translates into English as 'I'.
Sim, Eu vou para Portugal este Verão.