Is that phonetic? If so it may be "c'est là" : it's there (for example pointing to the Eiffel tower after a Senegalese tourist has asked you, most politely "Où est la Tour Eiffel s'il vous plait?") "where is the Eiffel tower, please"
It means: I do not know, or I have no idea.
"ci sei tu" is Italian for "It's you." It can be used to indicate that someone is present or that someone is responsible for a particular action or situation.
The number 6 in Italian is "sei".
The phrase "di dove sei?" translates to "Where are you from?" in English.
"La Viña" is Spanish for "the vineyard."
It means: I do not know, or I have no idea.
You are truly the woman of my life.
dove sei = where are you?
sei la
Sei la ragazza più bella! in Italian means "You're the most beautiful girl!" in English.
La so! Tu sei innamorato con me! in Italian means "I know it! You are in love with me!" in English.
sei la
sei la eu
"Sei la" is Italian for "you are the" in English. It can be used to express identity or characteristics about someone in a specific context. The phrase can be part of a larger sentence, and its meaning may vary depending on the words that follow it.
translation :"I love you are what more beautiful life"
Your Unique
Sei il mio insegnante in the masculine and Sei la mia insegnante in the feminine are two Italian equivalents of the English phrase "You are my teacher".Specifically, the verb sei is "(informal singular you) are". The masculine singular definite article il and the feminine la mean "the". The masculine possessive adjective mio and the feminine mia mean "my". the feminine/masculine noun insegnante translates as "teacher" in a general sense.The pronunciation will be "SEH-eel MEE-o EEN-sen-NYAN-te" in the masculine and "SEH-ee la MEE-a EEN-sen-NYAN-te" in the feminine.