It's ungrammatical, but the best I can figure, it means: "Oh how do I live"
If you live in a house, you would say "Vivo en una casa." If you live in an apartment, you would say "Vivo en un apartamento."
It means "I live on a farm in the country".
yo: I vivo: live en: in Yo vivo en= I live in...
Vivo en Missouri
"Vivo" in Italian translates to "alive" or "living" in English.
"Vivo en una casa" in English means "I live in a house."
"I live in…" is an English equivalent of the incomplete Italian phrase Vivo in... .Specifically, the verb vivo means "(I) am living, do live, live." The preposition in means the same in Italian and English. The pronunciation is "VEE-voh een… ."
no i dont
(Assuming "American" refers to the United States) Translation: Soy estadounidense pero vivo en Escocía.
"I live" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase "Io vivo."Specifically, the subject pronoun "io" means "I." The verb "vivo" means "(I) am living, do live, live." The pronunciation is "EE-oh VEE-voh."
ella es puruana...pero la mayoria de su vida vivo en Chile
While I live I will sing is the English equivalent of 'Dum vivo canam'. In the word by word translation, the conjunction 'dum' means 'while'. The verb 'vivo' means '[I] am living, do live, live'. The verb 'canam' means '[I] will sing'.
it means where do u live
It means, "I live in England."
"Not too lively (and fast)" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase vivo non troppo. The pronunciation will be "VEE-vo non TROP-po" in Italian.
The Spanish word "vivo" translates to "alive" or "living" in English. It can also mean "lively" or "vivid" depending on the context it is used in.