Sì, Babbo! is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Aye, Papi!" The masculine singular noun babbo may be rendered into English as "Dad," "Daddy," "Papa," "Pop" or "Pops." The pronunciation will be "see BAB-bo" in Italian.
It means: "Oh daddy much pleasure my love"
ITS MEANS HEYY HEYY HEYY hahhahahah love u guys
Aye is an expression of excitement, muy means very, caliente means hot. Woah, that's very hot!
It means 'yes' generally. It means yes of course but its 'Aye' not 'Ay' I'm Scottish and i use this type of slang.
Delicious in Japanese is "oishii"The proper way it is written is "美味しい"The hiragana version is "おいしい"To say "This is delicious" you say "Kore wa oishii desu"[これはおいしいです。]
IT CAN BE TRANSLATED TO ENGLISH AS FOLLOWED. Hey marry (informal line)
Aye means yes.
Sì, sei bona! in the feminine and Sì, sei bono! in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "Aye, you're hot!" Context makes clear which form suits. The respective pronunciations will be "see sey BO-na" in the feminine and "see sey BO-no" in the masculine in Italian.
It means: "Oh daddy much pleasure my love"
Sì as an verbal affirmation and voto favorevole as an electoral affirmation are Italian equivalents of the English word "aye." The choice depends upon whether the speaker is saying "yes" in a context other than the formal setting of tallying votes against and for. The respective pronunciations will be "see" and "VO-to FA-vo-REY-vo-ley" in Italian.
oh daddy! and its aye papi
IT CAN BE TRANSLATED TO ENGLISH AS FOLLOWED. Hey marry (informal line)
aye
It is pronounced "TREE-koh-loh-reh."
you AYE fuh
FOWK AYE (family always). This not Scottish Gaelic but the Scottish dialect of English.
like.. okay. or okay cool