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English: I love you. :) French: Je t‘aime.
阿拉伯语:ANA BEHABIK 俄语:YALIU BELIU DEPAIR 德语:ICH LIBE DISH 拉丁语:TI AMO 意大利语:AMO DE 日语:A YI XI DE LU 注:以上均为音标
作者:近似无限透明 回复日期: 19:59:45
阿拉伯语:ANA BEHABIK 俄语:YALIU BELIU DEPAIR 德语:ICH LIBE DISH 拉丁语:TI AMO 意大利语:AMO DE 日语:A YI XI DE LU 注:以上均为音标 =================================== 俄语:Я люблю дебя. (ya liubliu jiedia) 德语:Ich liebe dich. (yix libe dixi) 拉丁语:amo te. 或 te amo. (amo dei / dei amo) 意大利语:Ti amo. (di amo) 世界语:Mi amas vin. (mi amas vin) (括号内为汉语拼音。)
I Love you 的各國說法 Afrikaans
: Ek is lief vir jou
: Ek het jou lief Albanian
: Te dua
: Te dashuroj
: Ti je zemra ime Alsacien (Elsass)
: Ich hoan dich gear Amharic (Aethio.)
: Afekrishalehou
: Afekrischalehou Amharic (Ethiopian)
: Ewedishalehu (male/female to female)
: Ewedihalehu
(male/female to male) Apache
: Sheth she~n zho~n (nasalized vowels like
French, ‘~n‘ as in French
‘salon‘) Arabic (formal)
(male to female)
(male to female)
: Ohibokoma
(male or female to two males
or two females)
: Nohiboke
(more than one male or females
to female)
: Nohiboka
(male to male or female to male)
: Nohibokoma
(male to male or female to two
males or two females)
: Nohibokom
(male to male or female to more
than two males)
: Nohibokon
(male to male or female to more
than two females) Arabic (proper)
: Ooheboki
(male to female)
: Ooheboka
(female to male) Arabic
: Ana behibak
(female to male)
: Ana behibek
(male to female)
(male to female)
(female to male)
: Ana ahebik
: Ib‘n hebbak
: Ana ba-heb-bak
(female to male)
(male to female)
: Benhibak (more than one male or female to male)
: Benhibik
(male to male or female to female)
: Benhibkom
(male to male or female to more
than one male)
(spoken to someone of importance) Arabic (Umggs.)
: Ana hebbek Armenian
: Yes kez si‘rumem Ashanti/Akan/Twi
: Me dor wo Assamese
: Moi tomak bhal pau Bangladeschi
: Ami tomake walobashi Basque
: Maite zaitut
: Nere maitea (&My love/My darling&) Bassa
: Mengweswe Batak
: Holong rohangku di ho Bemba
: Ndikufuna Bengali
: Aami tomaake bhaalo baashi
: Ami tomay bhalobashi
: Ami tomake bahlobashi Berber
: Lakh tirikh Betazed
: Imzadi Bicol
: Namumutan ta ka Bolivian Quechua
: Qanta munani Bosnian
: Volim te Braille
: :..:| ..:| |..-.. .::&:.., :.:; Brazilian/Portuguese
: Eu te amo
: Querote
: Amo-te (pronounced &Amu‘-tee&) Bulgarian
: Obicham te
: As te obeicham
: As te obicham
: Obozhavam te (&I love you very much&) Burmese
: Chit pa de Cajun
: Mi aime jou Cambodian
: Kh_nhaum soro_lahn nhee_ah
: Bon sro lanh oon Canadian French
: Sh‘teme
(spoken, sounds like this)
: Je t‘aime
(&I like you&)
: Je t‘adore
(&I love you&) Catalan
: T‘estimo
(Catalonian)
: T‘estim
(Mallorcan)
: T‘estime
(Valencian)
: T‘estim molt (&I love you a lot&) Cebuano
: Gihigugma ko ikaw Central Yup‘ik
: Assiramken (‘r‘ is a voiced uvular fricative,
kind of like a German ‘ch‘, except
voiced and pronounced a little
farther back in the mouth, nearer
to the throat) Chamoru (or Chamorro)
: Hu guaiya hao Cherokee
: Aya gvgeyu‘i nihi Cheyenne
: Ne mohotatse Chichewa
: Ndimakukonda Chickasaw
: Chiholloli (first ‘i‘ nasalized) Chinese
: Gwa ai li
(Amoy)
: Ngo oi nei
(Cantonese)
: Wo oi nei
: Ngai oi gnee
(Hakka)
: Ngai on ni
: Ai oi ngee
: Wa ai lu
(Hokkien)
: Wo ai ni
(Mandarin/Putonghua)
: Ngo ai nong
(Wu) Corsican
: Ti tengu cara (male to female)
: Ti tengu caru (female to male) Creol
: Mi aime jou Croatian (familiar)
: Ja te volim
(used in proper speech)
: Volim te
(used in common speech) Croatian (formal)
: Ja vas volim
(used in proper speech)
: Volim vas
(used in common speech)
: Ljubim te
(in todays useage, &I kiss you&,
‘lj‘ pronounced like ‘ll‘ in
Spanish, one sound, ‘ly‘ish) Croatian (old)
: Ljubim te
(may still be found in poetry) Czech
: Miluji te
(a downwards pointing arrowhead
on top of the ‘e‘ in te, which is
pronounced ‘ye‘)
: Miluju te! (colloquial form)
: Ma‘m te (velmi) ra‘d (male speaker, &I like
you (very much)&, often
used and prefered)
: Ma‘m te (velmi) ra‘da (female speaker) Danish
: Jeg elsker dig Dusun
: Siuhang oku dia Dutch
: Ik hou van je
: Ik hou van jou
: Ik bemin je
(old fashioned)
: Ik bemin jou
: Ik heb je lief
: Ik ben verliefd op je (&I am in love with you&)
: Ik ben verliefd op jou
: Ik houd erg veel van jou (&I love you very
: Ik houd erg veel van je
much&)
: Ik vind je leuk
(&I like you&)
: Ik vind je aardig
: Ik vind je heel erg leuk
(&I like you very
: Ik vind je heel aardig
much&)
: Ik zie je graag
: Ik mag jou wel
(&I like you&)
: Ik mag jou heel graag (&I like you very much&)
(the last two are more superficial, thus more
suitable for male to male) Ecuador Quechua
: Canda munani English
: I love you
: I adore you
: I love thee
(used only in Christian context) Esperanto
: Mi amas vin Estonian
: Mina armastan sind
: Ma armastan sind Ethiopian
: Afgreki‘ Farsi (old)
: Tora dust mi daram Farsi
: Tora dost daram
(&I love you&)
: Asheghetam
: Doostat daram
(&I‘m in love with you&)
: Man asheghetam
(&I‘m in love with you&) Filipino
: Iniibig kita
: Mahal kita Finnish (formal)
: Mina& rakastan sinua
: Rakastan sinua
: Mina& pida&n sinusta (&I like you&) Finnish
: (Ma&) rakastan sua
: (Ma&) tykka&a&n susta
(&I like you&) French
: Je t‘aime
(&I love you&)
: Je t‘adore
(&I love you&, stronger meaning
between lovers)
: J‘ t‘aime bien (&I like you&, meant for friends
and family, not for lovers) French (formal)
: Je vous aime Gaelic
: Ta gra agam ort
: Moo graugh hoo Galician/Portuguese
: Eu te amo
/Brazilian
: Querote Georgian
: Miqvarhar (familiar)
: Me shen miqvarhar [MEh SHEN MI-(q pronounced
between k and g)-VURR-HURR]
: Miqvarharth (more respectful)
: Me thkven miqvarharth [MEh (t in breathing out)-
KVEN MI-(k/g)-VURR-HURR-(the same)] German (formal)
: Ich liebe Sie
(rarely used) German
: Ich liebe dich
: Ich hab‘ dich lieb
: Ich hab dich lieb (not so classic and
conservative) German dialects: Bavarian (Bayrisch)
: I moag di gern
(Bavaria/Bayern)
: I mog di
(right answer: &I di a&)
: I lieb di Berlin dialect
: Ick liebe dir
(Old, very old)
(Berlinerisch)
: Ick liebe Dich Berner-Deutsch
: Ig liebe di Bochumer
: Ich lieb Dich! Franconian (Fra&nkisch): Du gfa&llsd mer fai
(Franconia/Franken) : Bisd scho mai gouds freggerla (already in a
relationship)
: Mid dier ma&cherd ich a amol (sexually touched,
ment as a compliment, not litterally)
(the above 3 entries really mean &I like you&,
a Franke would never say &I love you&) Friesian (Friesisch)
: Ik hou fan dei (sp?)
: Ik hald fan dei Hessian (Hessisch)
: Isch habb disch libb Ostfriesisch
: Ick heb di leev Saarla&ndisch
: Isch hann disch lieb Saxon (Sa&chsisch)
: Isch liebdsch Swabian (Schwa&bisch)
: I mog di fei sauma&ssich (Literally &I like
you like a pig.&)
: I mog di ganz arg (More formal, literally
&I like you very much!&) Swiss German
: Ch‘ha di ga&rn
(Schweizerdeutsch) Vorarlberg dialect
: I stand total uf di
(Vorarlbergerisch) Greek
: S‘ayapo
(spoken &s‘agapo&, 3rd letter is lower
case ‘gamma‘)
: Eime eroteumenos mazi sou (&I‘m in love with)
: Eime eroteumenos me ‘sena(you&, male to female)
: Eime eroteumeni mazi sou (&I‘m in love with)
: Eime eroteumeni me ‘sena (you&, female to male)
: Se latrevo
(&I adore you&)
: Se thelo
(&I want you&, denotes sexual desire) Greek (Arhea/Ancient)
: Philo se Greenlandic
: Asavakit Gronings
: Ik hol van die Guarani‘
: Rohiyu (ro-hai‘-hyu) Gujrati
: Hoon tane pyar karoochhoon.
: Hoon tuney chaoon chhoon (‘n‘ is nasal, not
pronounced) Hausa
: Ina sonki Hawaiian
: Aloha wau ia ‘oe
: Aloha wau ia ‘oe nui loa
(&I love you
very much&) Hebrew
: Anee ohev otakh
(male to female)
: Anee ohevet otkha
(female to male)
: Anee ohev otkha
(male to male)
: Anee ohevet otakh
(female to female)
(‘kh‘ pronounced like
Spanish ‘j‘, Dutch ‘g‘, or similiar to
French ‘r‘) Hindi
: Mai tumase pyar karata hun
(male to female)
: Mai tumase pyar karati hun
(female to male)
: Mai tumse pyar karta hoon
: Mai tumse peyar karta hnu
: Mai tumse pyar karta hoo
: Mai tujhe pyaar kartha hoo
: Mae tumko peyar kia
: Main tumse pyar karta hoon
: Main tumse prem karta hoon
: Main tuze pyar karta hoon (‘n‘ is nasal, not
pronounced) Hopi
: Nu‘ umi unangwa‘ta Hungarian
: Szeretlek
: Te‘gedet szeretlek
(&It‘s you I love and
no one else&)
: Szeretlek te‘ged
(&It‘s you I love, you know,
you&, a reinforcement)
(The above two entries are never heard in
a normal context.) Ibaloi
: Pip-piyan tana
: Pipiyan ta han shili (&I like/love you
very much&) Ibo (Igbo)
: A hurum gi nanya Icelandic
: Eg elska thig (pronounced ‘yeg l-ska thig‘) Ilocano
: Ay ayating ka Indonesian
: Saya cinta padamu
(‘Saya‘, commonly used)
: Saya cinta kamu
: Saya kasih saudari
: Saja kasih saudari
: Aku tjinta padamu
(‘Aku‘, not often used)
: Aku cinta padamu
: Aku cinta kamu
( & ) Interglossa
: Mi esthe philo tu Italian
(relationship/lover/spouse)
: Ti voglio bene
(between friends)
: Ti voglio
(strong sexual meaning, &I want
you&, refering to other person‘s
body) Irish
: Taim i‘ ngra leat Irish/Gaelic
: t‘a gr‘a agam dhuit Japanese
: Kimi o aishiteiru (mostly male to female but
can be used female to male)
: Aishiteiru (both male and female use this)
: Chuu shiteyo (literally &Please give me a kiss&
mostly female to male)
: Ora, omee no koto ga suki da (very informal,
male to female)
: Ore wa omae ga suki da (informal, male to
female)
: Sukiyo (&I like you.&, informal,female to male)
: Watashi wa anata ga suki desu
(literally &I like YOU.&, female to male)
: Watashi wa anata o hontooni aishite imasu
(formal meaning &I REALLY love you.&,
female to male)
: A-i-shi-te ma-su(both male and female use this)
: Watakushi-wa anata-o aishimasu
(very formal meaning &I will love you.&,
future tense, female to male)
: Suki desu (used at the first time, like for a
start, when you are not yet real lovers,
both male and female use this) Javanese
: Kulo tresno Kankana
: Laylaydek sik a Kannada
: Naanu ninnanu preethisuthene
: Naanu ninnanu mohisuthene Kapampangang
: Kaluguran daka
(or Pampangang) Kekchi
: Nactinra Kikongo
: Mono ke zola nge (mono ke‘ zola nge‘) Kiswahili
: Nakupenda
: Nakupenda wewe
: Nakupenda malaika (&I love you, (my) angel&) Klingon
: bangwI‘ SoH
(&You are my beloved&)
: qamuSHa‘
(&I love you&)
: qamuSHa‘qu‘
(&I love you very much&)
: qaparHa‘
(&I like you&)
: qaparHa‘qu‘
(&I like you very much!&)
(words are often unnecessary as the thought
is most often conveyed nonverbally with
special growlings) Korean
: (Tangsinul) Saranghae (&I love you&)
: (Tangsinul) Saranghaeyo (with a little respect)
: (Tangsinul) Saranghamnida
: Nanun dangsineul saranghamnida
: Tangsinul
: Tangsinul sarang ha yo (&I love you, dear&)
: Dangsinul saranghee yo
: Saranghee
: Nanun dangsineul joahamnida (&I like you&)
: Nanun dangsineul mucheok joahamnida (&I like
very much&)
: Nanun dangsineul mucheok saranghamnida (&I love
you very much&)
: Nanun geudae joa (&I like him& or &I like her&)
: Nanun geudae saranghamnida (&I love him& or
&I love her&)
: Gdaereul hjanghan naemaeum alji (&You know how
much I love him/her&)
: Nanun neoreul saranghanda
: Joahaeyo (&I like you&)
: Saranghaeyo
(more formal)
: Saranghapanida
(more respectful)
: Norul sarang hae (male to female in casual
relationship)
: Tangshini choayo (&I like you, in a romantic
way&) Kpele
: I walikana Kurdish
: Ez te hezdikhem Lao
: Khoi hak jao
: Khoi mak jao lai (&I love you very much&)
: Khoi hak jao lai (&I like you very much&)
: Khoi mak jao
(This means &I prefer you&,
but is used for &I love you&.) Latin
: Te amo
: Vos amo Latin
: (Ego) Amo te
(‘Ego‘, for emphasis) Latvian
: Es tevi milu (pronounced ‘es tevy meelu‘)
(‘i in ‘milu‘ has a line over it,
a ‘long i‘)
: Es milu tevi (less common) Lebanese
: Bahibak Lingala
: Nalingi yo Lisbon lingo
: Gramo-te bue‘, chavalinha! Lithuanian
: Tave myliu (Ta-ve mee-lyu)
: Ash mir lutavah Lojban
: Mi do prami Luo
: Aheri Luxembourgish
: Ech hun dech ga&r Maa
: Ilolenge Macedonian
: Te sakam
(a little stronger than &I like you&)
: Te ljubam
(&I really love you&)
: Jas te sakam (‘j‘ sounds like ‘y‘ in May)
: Pozdrav (&Greetings&) Madrid lingo
: Me molas, Tronca! Maiese
: Wa wa Malay/Indonesian
: Saya cintakan kamu (grammatically correct)
: Saya cinta akan kamu(expanded version of above)
: Saya sayangkan kamu (grammatically correct)
: Saya sayang akan kamu (expanded version)
: Aku cinta pada mu (most direct translation)
: Saya cintakan awak
: Aku cinta pada kau
: Saya cinta pada mu (best, most commonly used)
: Saya sayangkan engkau (‘engkau‘ often shortened
to ‘kau‘, ‘engkau‘ is informal form and should
only be used if you know the person _really_
: Saya sayang pada mu
: Aku sayangkan engkau
: Saya sayang pada mu
: Aku menyintai mu
: Aku menyayangi mu
: Aku kasih pada mu
: Aku jatuh cinta pada mu Malayalam
: Ngan ninne snaehikkunnu
: Njyaan ninne‘ preetikyunnu
: Njyaan ninne‘ mohikyunnu Maltese
: Jien inhobbok Marathi
: Mi tuzya var prem karato
: Me tujhashi prem karto (male to female)
: Me tujhashi prem karte (female to male) Marshallese
: Yokwe yuk (sort of multi-purpose, like Aloha,
literally &Love to you, my friend&) Mohawk
: Konoronhkwa Mokilese
: Ngoah mweoku kaua Moroccan
(both mean the same, but spoken)
: Kanhebek (in different cities) Morse Code
._.. ___ ..._ .
_.__ ___ .._
: ___.. ___.. (Literally &88&, a Morse Code
shorthand meaning &Love, hugs & kisses to you.&)
: __... ...__ (Literally &73&, a Morse Code
shorthand for non romantic friends
meaning &Best regards.&) Nahuatl
: Ni mitz tla-zo-tla (the ‘a‘s are &schwa&s) Navaho
: Ayor anosh‘ni Ndebele
: Niyakutanda Norwegian
: Jeg elsker deg
(Bokmaal)
: Eg elskar deg
(Nynorsk) Nyanja
: Ninatemba Op
: Op lopveop yopuop Osetian
: Aez dae warzyn Pampangang
: Kaluguran daka
(or Kapampangang) Papiamento
: Mi ta stima‘bo Pig Latin
: Ie ovele ouye Pilipino
: Mahal kita
: Iniibig kita Polish
: Kocham cie
: Kocham ciebie
: Ja cie kocham (slang, not commonly used) Portuguese
: Eu amo-te (pronounced &Eu amu‘-tee&)
: Estou apaixonado por ti (male to female,
&I‘m in love with you&, pronounced &Esto^
hapa‘isho^na‘duu puur ti‘&)
: Estou apaixonada por ti (female to male,
&I‘m in love with you&, pronounced &Esto^
hapa‘isho^na‘daa puur ti‘&)
: Eu adoro-te (&I adore you.&)
: Tu e‘s o meu amor (&You are my love.&)
: Eu gosto de ti (&I like you.&)
: Quero-te (&I want you&, understood as romantic
feelings but may have sexual tones)
: Eu desejo-te (&I desire you&, may have sexual
tones)
: Eu preciso de ti (&I need you.&)
: Eu quero fazer amor contigo (&I want to make
love with you.&) Portuguese lingo
: Gramo-te `a brava! (&I love you very much&,
literally &I love you wildly&) Pulaar
: Mbe de yid ma (mbe: d: yidh ma)
(Pronounced as two words,
&Mbe deyidma&.
‘b‘ and second
‘d‘ have bars through the stems
indicating affrication, the ‘:‘
indicate minute pauses) Punjabi
: Main tainu pyar karna
: Mai taunu pyar karda
: Mein nu terey na^l piyaar ay (pronounced:
&meinu therei naal piya‘rei&,
as in bath)
‘ = stressed syllable Pushto
: Mung jane‘ (pronounced: &puxto: mu‘ng jane‘&)
: Pa ta mayan yem Quenya
: Tye-mela‘ne Raetoromanisch
: Te amo Romanian
: Te iubesc
(stronger) Russian
: Ya vas lyublyu
(old fashioned)
: Ya tyebya lyublyu
(best)
: Ya lyublyu vas
(old fashioned)
: Ya lyublyu tyebya Saami
: Mun ra‘hkistan du Samoan
: Ou te alofa outou
: Ou te alofa ia te oe
: Talo‘fa ia te oe (&Hello, from me to you&) Sanskrit
: Anurag (a higher love, like the love of music
or art) Scot-Gaelic
: Tha gradh agam ort Serbian (formal)
: Ja vas volim
(used in proper speech)
: Volim vas
(used in common speech)
: Ljubim te
(in todays useage, &I kiss you&,
‘lj‘ pronounced like ‘ll‘ in
Spanish, one sound, ‘ly‘ish) Serbian (familiar)
: Ja te volim
(used in proper speech)
: Volim te
(used in common speech) Serbian (old)
: Ljubim te
(may still be found in poetry) Serbocroatian
: Volim te
: Ljubim te
: Ja te volim (‘j‘ sounds like ‘y‘ in May) Sesotho(Southern Sotho) : Ke a mo rata Shona
: Ndinokuda Sinhala
: Mama oya‘ta a‘darei Sioux
: Techihhila Slovak
: Lubim ta Slovene
: Ljubim te Solresol
: do-re mi-la-si do-mi Spanish
: Te amo
: Te quiero
: Te adoro
(&I adore you&)
: Te deseo
(&I desire you&)
: Me antojis
(&I crave you&) Srilankan
: Mama oyata arderyi Swahili
: Nakupenda
: Naku penda (followed by the person‘s name)
: Ninikupenda
: Dholu‘o Swedish
: Jag a&lskar dig (‘dig‘ pronounced like ‘day‘) Syrian/Lebanese
: Bhebbek (male to female)
: Bhebbak (female to male) Tagalog
: Mahal kita Tahitian
: Ua here au ia oe
: Ua here vau ia oe Tamil
: Naan unnai kadalikiren
: Nan unnai kathalikaren
: Ni yaanai kaadli karen (&You love me&)
: N^an unnaki kathalikkinren (&I love you&)
: Nam vi‘rmberem Telugu
: Ninnu premistunnanu
: Neenu ninnu pra‘mistu‘nnanu
: Nenu ninnu premistunnanu Thai (formal)
: Phom rak khun
(male to female)
: Phom ruk koon
: Ch‘an rak khun
(female to male)
: Chun ruk koon
( & ) Thai
: Khao raak thoe
(affectionate, sweet, loving) Timerio
: 1-80-17 Tswana
: Dumela Tunisian
: Ha eh bak Turkish (formal)
: Sizi seviyorum Turkish
: Seni seviyorum
: Seni begeniyorum
(&I adore you&)
(g has a bar on it)
: Senden ho$laniyorum (Sound of ‘$‘ is like ‘sh‘
in English.
Must be a point under ‘S‘.
The ‘i‘ must be without a point.) Twi
: Me dowapaa Ukrainian
: Ya tebe kokhayu
: Ja tebe kokhaju (real true love)
: Ja vas kokhaju
: Ja pokokhav tebe
: Ja pokokhav vas Urdu
: Main tumse muhabbat karta hoon
: Mujhe tumse mohabbat hai
: Mujge tumae mahabbat hai
: Kam prem kartahai
: Muje se mu habbat hai
: Mujhe tum se piyaar hai (pronounced:
&mujhei‘ Oo‘m se‘ piya‘r ha‘e&)
: Mujhe tum se muhabbat hai (pronounced:
&mujhe‘i Oo‘m se‘ mohub:u‘th ha‘e&,
in bath)
‘ = stressed syllable, Oo‘ =
like in bold Vai
: Na lia Vdrmldndska
: Du dr gvrgo te mdg Vietnamese
: Toi yeu em
: Anh ye^u em (male to female, or older
to younger, romantic)
: Em ye^u anh (female to male, or younger
to older, romantic)
: Con thu+o+ng ba (kid to father)
: Ba thu+o+ng con (father to kid)
: Con thu+o+ng ma‘ (kid to mother)
: Ma‘ thu+o+ng con (mother to kid)
: Cha‘u thu+o+ng o^ng (grandkid to grandpa)
: O^ng thu+o+ng cha‘u (grandpa to grandkid)
: Ba` thu+o+ng cha‘u (grandkid to grandma)
: Cha‘u thu+o+ng ba` (grandma to grandkid)
: Anh thu+o+ng em (big brother to younger
sister or brother)
: Chi. thu+o+ng em (big sister to younger
sister or brother)
: Em thu+o+ng anh (younger sister/brother
to big brother)
: Em thu+o+ng chi. (younger sister/brother
to big sister) Volapu&k
: La&fob oli Vulcan
: Wani ra yana ro aisha Welsh
: Rwy‘n dy garu di
: Yr wyf i yn dy garu di (chwi) Wolof
: Da ma la nope
: Da ma la nop (da ma‘lanop) Yiddish
: Ikh hob dikh lib
: Ich libe dich
: Ich han dich lib
: Kh‘hob dikh lib
: Kh‘ob dikh holt
: Ikh bin in dir farlibt Yoruba
: Mo Feran e Yucatec Maya
: ‘in k‘aatech
(the love of lovers)
: In yakumech
: ‘in yabitmech
(the love of family, which
indicates more a desire to
spoil and protect the other
person) Yugoslavian
: Ja te volim Zazi
: Ezhele hezdege (sp?) Zulu
: Mena tanda wena
: Ngiyakuthanda! Zuni
: Tom ho‘ ichema Explanation of Accents ---------------------- a‘
-& ‘a‘ with the acute accent (‘) over it, accent aigu
(ASCII code 160) a&
-& ‘a‘ with two dots (Umlaut)
(ASCII code 132) a^
-& elongated vowel (e.g. 2 a‘s) a~
-& ‘a‘ with a tilde(~) over it e^
-& ‘e‘ with a carot(^) over it e‘
-& ‘e‘ with the acute accent (‘) over it (ASCII code 130) n~
-& ‘n‘ with a tilde(~) over it o~
-& ‘o‘ with a tilde(~) over it Explanation of Languages ------------------------ Afrikaans
-& spoken by people of Dutch heritage in South Africa Alentejano
-& An accented form of Portuguese spoken in the Alentejo
region of Portugal (the part of the country south of
the river Tagus). Alsacien
-& French/German dialect (live in France, but speak
like Germans) Amharic
-& Official language spoken in Ethiopia.
Just one of
over 80 languages spoken there. Apache
-& North American Indian Nation rangeing from the plains
states to the eastern Rocky Mountains and from the
Canadian to Mexican borders Arabic
-& language spoken in the Arab countries including
but not limited to Bahrain, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan,
Kuwait, Libya, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, and
the region of Palestine. Ashanti/Akan/Twi-& Ashanti is the most popular and predominate of
many dialects spoken in Ghana.
The Ghanan language
is generally refered to as either Akan or Twi. Assamese
-& language spoken in the state of Assam, India Bassa
-& language spoken in Africa Batak
-& language spoken in the northern Sumatra province of
Indonesia Bavarian
-& language spoken in the state of Bavaria, southern
Germany (actually a German dialect) Bemba
-& language spoken in Africa Bengali
-& language spoken in the state of West Bengal, India,
as well as almost all people of Bangladesh Betazed
-& Spoken in Star Trek on planet Betazed Bicol
-& dialect spoken in the Philippines Braille
-& The alphabet represented by patterns of raised dots.
It is ‘read‘ by touch. Basque
-& language spoken in the Basque region of Spain Cajun
-& French dialect spoken by people who migrated from
Acadia, Canada, to the Louisiana, USA, area.
Acadia is in an Atlantic province. Catalan
-& language spoken in the Barcelona region of Spain Cebuano
-& language spoken in Philipines near the town of Cebu Central Yup‘ik
-& language spoken by the indigenous Eskimo people of
southwestern Alaska Cherokee
-& North American Indian tribe Cheyenne
-& North American Indian tribe, part of the Apache
Nation Chichewa
-& language spoken in Malawi, Central Africa Chickasaw
-& North American Indian tribe (southeastern Oklahoma) Chinese Amoy
-& language spoken on Taiwan, an island off Fukien
Province in southeast China, and Singapore Cantonese
-& language spoken in the region around Guangzhou
including Hong Kong and also in Malaysia Mandarin/
-& The official language of China
litterally ‘common language‘
also spoken by native Chinese in Singapore and
Malaysia Wu
-& language spoken in Jiangsu Province Creol
-& French dialect spoken by people from Haiti.
basicly French with a little English and German. Dusun
-& language spoken by the Dusun tribe, one of the largest
in North Borneo Dutch
-& language spoken in the Netherlands and the provinces
of East- and West-Flanders, Antwerp, Limburg, and
Flemmish-Brabant, Belgium Esperanto
-& The International Language. An ‘artificial‘ language. Farsi
-& language spoken in Iran.
Dialects of Farsi spoken in
Pakistan and Afghanestan.
Farsi is sometimes called
Persian. Franconian
-& German dialect spoken by the citizens of Franken or
Franconia which is part of Bavaria in the area
around Nuremberg French
-& language spoken in France, Canada, and the provinces
of Luxembourg, Namur, Liege, Hainault, and Brabant-
Walloon(Brabant of the Walloons), Belgium Friesian
-& language spoken in northern Holland, northern
Germany, and in some parts of Denmark
(mainly west coast) Gaelic
-& language spoken in Ireland Galician
-& Galicians live in the four Spanish provinces located
along the northwest coast of the Iberian Peninsula,
but their language zone shades into neighboring areas
of Spain and Portugal as well. The four provinces are
A Corun~a, Lugo, Ourense, and Pontevedra. Georgian
-& language spoken in Georgia Gronings
-& Dutch dialect Guarani‘
-& one of the two official languages in Paraguay Gujrati
-& language spoken in the state of Gujrat, India, and
Pakistan Hakka
-& Chinese dialect from Manchuria Hausa
-& language spoken in Nigeria Hebrew
-& language spoken in Israel and by Jewish people Hindi
-& language spoken in the northern states of India Hopi
-& North American Indian tribe (southwest, Arizona) Ibaloi
-& dialect spoken in the Philippines by the Igorot
natives, specifically the Ibaloi‘s Ilocano
-& dialect spoken in the Philippines Interglossa
-& An ‘artificial‘ language invented by Lancelot Hogben,
circa 1940. Kankana
-& dialect spoken in the Philippines by the Igorot
natives, specifically the Kankana-ey‘s Kannada
-& language spoken in the state of Karnataka,
southern India Kapampangang
-& Filipino dialect
(or Pampangang) Kekchi
-& language spoken by 380,000 Mayans in Guatemala,
Belize, and El Salvador Kikongo
-& language spoken in Zaire, Africa Klingon
-& Spoken in Star Trek.
Proper term for the language
is &tlhIngan Hol&.
The Klingon homeworld is
Qo‘noS, in English it‘s Kronos. Kpele
-& language spoken in Africa Lao
-& language spoken in Laos and by the Laotian people
living in northern Thailand Luo
-& language spoken in Kenya Luxembourgish
-& language spoken in Luxembourg and in the border areas
in Belgium (Arlon), France (Thionville), and Germany.
A mixture of French and German, with the emphasis on
German. Maa
-& language spoken in Africa Malayalam
-& language spoken in the state of Kerala, India Maltese
-& language spoken on Malta, a small independent island
in the Mediterranean Sea south of Italy with around
400,000 inhabitants.
Maltese is a mixture of Arabic
and Italian mostly. Mandarin/
-& The official language of China
Putunghua Marathi
-& language spoken in the state of Maharastra, India
(Bombay is the capital city) Marshallese
-& language spoken on the Marshall Islands Mohawk
-& North American Indian tribe (New England, maybe one of
the Seven Nations/Iriquois?) Mokilese
-& language spoken on Mokil and Ponape (Pohnpei) Moroccan
-& language spoken in Morocco, North Africa Morse Code
-& A code using series of dots and dashes to represent
letters, numbers, and other characters. Originally
developed by Samual Morse for use on the telegraph. Navaho
-& North American Indian tribe (southwest) Ndebele
-& language spoken in Zimbabwe Nyanja
-& language spoken in Africa Papiamento
-& language spoken on the island of Aruba Portuguese
-& The official and regular language spoken in Portugal,
Brazil, Angola, Mozambique, Sao Tome and Principe,
Cape Verde, Macau, Guinea-Bissau, Goa(India), and
Galicia(Spain). Also spoken in but not the official
language of East Timor, Damao(India), and Diu(India).
It is the sixth most spoken language in the world. Pulaar
-& dialect spoken in Senegal by the Fulani people Punjabi
-& language spoken in the state of Punjab, northern India Quechua
-& language spoken by Incan Indians (South America) Quenya
-& Elvish language invented by J. R. R. Tolkien for his
Notably, &The Lord of the Rings&. Saami
-& Language of an indigenous people living in the
Northern Scandinavian region of Lapland. Formerly
known as Laplanders or Lapps.
They have several
dialects, but this is the main one, Northern Saami.
Their language is related to Finnish. Sesotho
-& language spoken in South Africa
(Southern Sotho) Shona
-& language spoken in Zimbabwe Sinhala
-& Language of the non-Tamil (majority) people of
Sri Lanka.
Also spoken in Ceylon. Sioux
-& North American Indian tribe (upper midwest) Solresol
-& An artificial musical language composed of sequences
of notes on the diatonic scale (do, re, mi,...) sung
by name for comprehensibility to the tone deaf.
7 notes could also be mapped into colors so that
writing would be a series of colored squares. South Africa
-& There are several official languages listed in the
Constitution of South Africa.
They are: Afrikanns,
English, Ndebele(Sindebele, isiNdebele), saLeboa,
Sesotho, Swazi(Siswathi, siSwati), Tsonga(Xitsonga),
Setswana, Tshivenda, Venda(Tshivenda), Xhosa(isiXhosa),
Zulu(isiZulu), Sepedi. Spanish
-& Language spoken in Spain and Latin America(Mexico,
Central and South America) except Brazil. It is the
third most spoken language in the world. Swabian
-& One of the German dialects. The literal word ‘love‘
(Schwa&bisch)
does not exist in this language. Swahili
-& language spoken by some indigenous tribes of East
Africa Tagalog
-& dialect spoken in the Philippines Tamil
-& language spoken in the state of Tamil Nadu, India,
and in Sri Lanka(by a low percentage of the people),
Singapore, Malaysia, Mauritus Telugu
-& language spoken in the state of Andhra Pradesh, India
(eleventh most spoken language in the world) Tetum
-& language spoken in East Timor Timerio
-& An artificial language using only numbers.
The idea
was that each language has a different word for each
concept, so if the concepts were numbered, automatic
translation would be possible. Tswana
-& language spoken in Africa Twi/Akan
-& language spoken in Ghana.
See also Ashanti. Urdu
-& language spoken in Pakistan and India Vai
-& language spoken in Africa Vdrmldndska
-& language spoken in the Vdrmland(Vaermland), Sweden,
region north of Lake Vdnern.The real Vdrmldndska
language is spoken to the northwest of Lake Vdnern
up to the border of Norway and in northern Vdrmland
around the town of Torsby by about 270,000 people,
90,000 of which consider it to be their mother
It is a mixture of Swedish and Norwegian
with some borrowed words from the many Valloonian
people who went there to work as engineers in the
mining industry during the 17th century. Volapu&k
-& An ‘artificial‘ language invented by August Scheyler,
circa 1880. Vulcan
-& Spoken in Star Trek by Mr. Spock and others from
the planet Vulcan Walloon
-& literally Welsh(not English Welsh), a little used
French dialect with certain German influences
spoken in the provinces of Luxembourg, Namur,
Liege, Hainault, and Brabant-Walloon(Brabant of
the Walloons), Belgium Wolof
-& dialect spoken in Senegal by the Wolof people Yoruba
-& language spoken in West Africa, specifically in Nigeria
and bordering countries Yucatec Maya
-& language spoken by indigenous people of the Yucatan
peninsula in Mexico Zazi
-& Kurdic dialect Zuni
-& North American Indian tribe
espanol: Te amo mucho ! 我爱你 Te quiero mucho ! 我喜欢你!
多谢各位大侠!~~~~~~~~~特别感谢waftingheart!~~~ 不过waftingheart 是发的汉语拼音吧? 有谁有文字的吗?
俄语:Я люблю дебя. (ya liubliu jiedia) дебя错了,应该为тебя
&俄语:Я люблю дебя. (ya liubliu jiedia)& -----ya liubliu jieBIA.
not& jieDIA&
In Hawwaii,the local express his love by words:&aloha&,which share the same meaning of &hello& or &how are you& in English.
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lupus_daemonii:俄语:Я люблю дебя. (ya liubliu jiedia) 德语:Ich liebe dich. (yix libe dixi) 拉丁语:amo te. 或 te amo. (amo dei / dei amo) 意大利语:Ti amo. (di amo) 世界语:Mi amas vin. (mi amas vin) This is right.
86种语言说我爱你 德语:ich liebe dich. 法语:je taime / je tadore 希腊语:sagapo 犹太语:ani ohev otach(male or famale),ani ohevet otcha (male or famale) 匈牙利:szeretlek 爱尔兰:taim ingra leat 爱沙尼亚:mina armastan sind 芬兰:min rakastan sinua 比利时佛兰芒语:ik zie u graag 意大利语:ti amo,ti vogliobene 拉丁语:te amo,vos amo 拉托维亚:es tevi milu 里斯本:lingo gramo-te bue,chavalinha 立陶宛:tave myliu 马其顿:te sakam 马耳他:inhobbok 波兰语:kocham cie,ja cie kocham 葡萄牙:eu amo-te 罗马尼亚:te iu besc,te ador 荷兰:ik hou van jou 英语:i love you 捷克:miluji te 丹麦:jeg elsker dig 阿尔萨斯:ich hoan dich gear 亚美尼亚:yes kezi seeroom yem 巴伐利亚:i mog di narrisch gern 保加利亚:ahs te obicham 西班牙加泰隆语:testim 克罗地亚:volim te 阿塞疆语:men seni serivem 孟加拉:ami tomay bhalobashi 缅甸:chit pa de 柬埔寨:bong salang oun 菲律宾:mahal kita,iniibig kita 印度古吉拉特语:hoon tane prem karun chuun 北印度语:main tumse pyar karta hoon 印度尼西亚:saja kasih saudari 日本:kimi o aishiteru sukiyo 朝鲜:tangshin-i cho-a-yo 爪哇语:aku tresno marang sliromu 老挝:khoi huk chau 马来语:saya cinta mu 马来西亚:saya cintamu 蒙古语:bi chamd hairtai 尼泊尔:ma tumilai maya garchu,ma timilai man parauchu 波斯语:tora dost daram 他加禄语:mahal kita 南非语:ek het jou lief ek is lief vir jou 加纳:me do wo 6pa 埃塞俄比亚阿姆哈雷地区:ene ewedechalu(for ladies) ene ewedehalwe(for men) 阿拉伯语:ana ahebak(to a male) arabic ana ahebek(to a female) 瑞士德语:ich li b dich 6par 克里奥尔语:mon kontan ou 豪萨语:ina sonki 肯尼亚班图语:nigwedete 马达加斯加语:tiako ianao 印度阿萨姆邦语:moi tomak bhal pau 南亚泰米尔语:tamil nan unnaik kathalikkinren 印度泰卢固语:neenu ninnu pramistunnanu 泰国:chan rak khun 乌尔都语:mein tumhay pyar karti hun(woman to man) mein tumhay pyar karta hun(man to woman) 越南:em yeu anh(woman to man) anh yeu em(man to woman) 新西兰毛里语:kia hoahai 爱斯基摩:nagligivaget 格陵兰岛:asavakit 冰岛:eg elska tig 阿尔巴尼亚:t dua shume 俄罗斯:ya vas iyublyu,ya tibia lyublyu 塞尔维亚:volim te 斯洛文尼亚语:ljubim te 西班牙:te amo,tequiero 瑞典:jag lskar dig 土耳其:seni seviyorum 乌克兰:ja vas kokhaju 威尔士:rwyn dy garu di 亚述语:ana bayanookh(female to male) ana bayinakh(male to female) 高加索切尔克斯语:wise cas 汉语:我爱你!
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