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How to say "I love you" in 30+ languages
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DaveSaenz
You can see how similar Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese are. :)

English:
I Love You

Spanish:
Te Amo

Portuguese:
Eu te amo

Italian:
Ti Amo

French:
Je T'aime

German:
lch Liebe Dich

Greek:
S'agapo

Japanese:
Ai e imasu

Chinese
Wo Ai Ni

Swedish:
Jag älskar dig

Dutch:
ik hou van jou

Danish:
jeg elsker dig

Ukrainian:
ja tebe kohaju

Croatian:
Volim te

Serbian:
Ja te volim

Polish:
Kocham Ciê



Russian (informal):

Я тебя люблю

Phonetically its something like: Ya tebya lyublyu.






Alabama
Arkansas
Kansas
Oklahoma
parts of Texas
North Carolina
South Carolina
Georgia
Tennessee
Idaho
Missouri
Mississippi
Montana
Louisiana
Virginia
West Virginia
Kentucky
parts of Florida

Nice Ass, Get in the truck

:haha:
Laughingfennec
quote:
Originally posted by DaveSaenz

Chinese
Wo Ai Ni



thanx for this one ;) i may use it , i've had it...
gwrmarines
Portugueses
Eu te amo

Korean
나는 너를 사랑한다

Japanese in japanese
私は愛する HARRRR!

Chinese in chinese
我爱你 HARRRRR!
Laughingfennec
russian?
DrUg_Tit0
:)

Anyway
Croatian and Serbian
Volim te/Ja te volim

Russian
ÿ òå ëþáëþ, or something like that
gwrmarines
Russian
ß ëþáëþ âàñ
=Sound Lab=
Thanx for these important words!:D
Dumba
Am sure this information will make me more popular with the ladies! :crazy:
Delay Llama
quote:
Originally posted by DaveSaenz
Japanese
Ai snote Imasu

quote:
Originally posted by gwrmarines
Japanese in japanese
私は愛する HARRRR!

The second one is a bit too formal (and it's on infinitive form), whereas the first one is a bit wrong because "snote" is not even writeable in Japanese :D

If you want to touch the heart of you Japanese beloved one, you'd better say "Ai e imasu" :)
keithos27
Greek

S'agapo

French

Je t'aime

reveal
quote:
Originally posted by DaveSaenz
Swedish
Jag Alskar


"Jag älskar dig"
astroboy
quote:
Originally posted by gwrmarines
Russian
ß ëþáëþ âàñ


Definitely too formal for most occasions, unless you're telling a teacher you love her or something.

This is the one to use:
Я тебя люблю

Heh... I ven found an mp3 link of it... she says it twice.
Phonetically its something like: Ya tebya lyublyu

I don't think the Chinese one will be too useful unless you can get someone to tell you how to pronounce it with the correct tonalities... otherwise you might end up saying something like "purple monkey dishwasher".
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