i am forever yours
etera vice ondu
Hii we will say shathamaanam
onnu, randu, munnu
First, we need the entire riddle.Four teachers were walking. One is an English teacher, one is a Hindi teacher, one is a Malayalam teacher, and one was a math teacher. They all suddenly saw a thief. The English teacher shouted "thief.. thief." The hindi teacher shouted "chor.. chor" (chor in hindi means 'thief'). The Malayalam teacher shouted "kalan.. kalan" (kallan in malayalam means 'thief'). What will the maths teacher say or shout?The math teacher would call the thief 420 420.This joke is significant in India due to their laws and pop culture.420 is the slang name given to petty thieves, tricksters, or frauds in the Indian subcontinent. This comes from Section 420 of the Indian Penal Code, which deals with cheating related crimes. It is referenced in the title of the Bollywood movie "Shree 420."
for the numbers you say 58!!! Seriously u say: cinquante-huit
Njan
You can say "നിനക്കായി ഞാൻ ഉണ്ടായിരിക്കും" (ninakkayi njan undaayirikkum) in Malayalam to mean "I will be with you".
You say "ഞാൻ നിന്നെ സ്നേഹിക്കുന്നു" (njan ninne snehikkunnu) to express "I love you" in Malayalam.
njan nintethaanu
Njan urangukayayirunnu
In Malayalam, you can say "ശരി, ഞാൻ കാത്തിരിക്കുന്നു" (shari, njan kathirikkunnu) to mean "Ok, I am waiting."
To say "tell me" in Malayalam, you can say "ഞാൻ പറയിക്കുക" (pronounced as njan parayikkuka).
njan ninne kathirikkunnu
To say "I had food" in Malayalam, you would say "ഞാൻ ഭക്ഷണം കഴിച്ചു" (pronounced as "njan bhakshanam kazhichu"). In this sentence, "ഞാൻ" (njan) means "I," "ഭക്ഷണം" (bhakshanam) means "food," and "കഴിച്ചു" (kazhichu) means "had."
You can say "ഞാൻ നന്നായിരിക്കുന്നു" (njan nannayirikkunnu) in Malayalam to mean "I am fine."
In Malayalam, you would say "ഞാൻ ക്രോധിക്കപ്പെടുന്നില്ല" (njan krodhikkappettunnilla) which translates to "I am not angry."
You can say "ഞാന് ഉറക്കമുള്ള ആണ്" in Malayalam, which translates to "I am sleeping."