TAY de-SID-air-oh.
The Latin equivalent of the English statement 'I miss you' is Te desidero. In the word-by-word translation, the personal pronoun 'te' means 'you'. The verb 'desidero' means '[I] am missing, do miss, miss'.
In Spanish "I miss you" is te extrano and "I love you" is te amo.
The latin for 'I like you' is 'Te amo'
Mi amor means "My love" te extraño means "I miss you" so the phrase mi amor como te extraño means, "my love how I miss you", or "my love how much I miss you"
Te extraño mamá : I miss you mom. Te extraño papá : I miss you dad. Te extraño amiga (f) or amigo (m): I miss you my friend. Te extraño mi amor: I miss you my love. Te extraño corazón: I miss you my sweetheart. Te extraño cariño: I miss you darling.
The Latin equivalent of the English statement 'I miss you' is Te desidero. In the word-by-word translation, the personal pronoun 'te' means 'you'. The verb 'desidero' means '[I] am missing, do miss, miss'.
Etiam te desidero.
: i love you = amo te : i miss you = te desidero : please, give us a chance? gratificor, do fortunus
I want You
Te desiderabimus.
You pronounce it "Te Ex-Trawn-yo".
The Latin phrase for "I love you" is "te amo."
Latin
It's real easy pronounce it art (like the class) e(short e) mis (Like Miss)Art-amiss. as in ART, the creative classification. and AMISS as used in a sentence- " the book was amiss from the library."
Miss you = Te extraño
Te Odio (Te Oh-De-Oh)
Pronounce as monty-chel-lo