The meaning of the Latin phrase 'amo te' is the following: I love you. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'amo' means '[I] love'; and 'te' means 'you'. The pronunciation is the following: AH-moo tay. The Latin language tends to place the verb at the end of the sentence. Therefore, a more Latin construction is as follow: 'te amo'. But either way is acceptable.
Te adoro; te admiror.
To say the words 'I love you baby' in Latin you say 'Quis te amo'. In the Italian language these words are said as 'Ti amo piccola'.
The latin for 'I like you' is 'Te amo'
The Latin language is variously referred to in Latin: as Latinum, lingua Latina ("Latin tongue"), or just Latina (short for the preceding). To say "I love Latin" you would use the accusative (direct object) form of one of these plus the verb amo "I love":Amo LatinumAmo [linguam] LatinamYou could also say Ego amare Latine
Well, for starters, te amo is Spanish, not Italian. And secondly, it means "I love you".
te amo
Te amo.
The Latin phrase for "I love you" is "te amo."
I Love you.
It is probably "te amo", which means "I love you" in Latin.
Te adoro; te admiror.
te amo Amo means I love Te means you
Te amo or Vos amo
Te amo.
love = amor in Latin (not Roman)
To say the words 'I love you baby' in Latin you say 'Quis te amo'. In the Italian language these words are said as 'Ti amo piccola'.
This is a word-for-word translation into Latin of "I love you so much", but it is not actually a grammatical Latin sentence. A better translation would be Ut maxime te amo ("How very much I love you").