καπτα Μαριώ Δόκιμος
Αριθμός μηνυμάτων : 97 Location : ΠΕΙΡΑΙΑΣ Registration date : 18/07/2009
| Θέμα: Σ' ΑΓΑΠΩΩΩΩΩΩ ! Πεμ Σεπ 24, 2009 8:31 pm | |
| Σ' ΑΓΑΠΩ Η ΜΑΓΙΚΗ ΑΥΤΗ ΛΕΞΟΥΛΑ ΣΕ...198 ΓΛΩΣΣΕΣ !!! Afrikaans — Ek is lief vir jou — Ek het jou lief
Akan (Ghana) — Me dor wo
Albanian — Te dua — Te dashuroj — Ti je zemra ime
Alentejano (Portugal) — Gosto de ti, porra!
Alsacien (Elsass) — Ich hoan dich gear
Amharic (Aethiopian) — Afekrishalehou — Afekrischalehou — 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) — Ohiboke (male to female) — Ohiboki (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) — Ahebich (male to female) — Ahebik (female to male) — Ana ahebik — Ib'n hebbak — Ana ba-heb-bak — Bahibak (female to male) — Bahibik (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) — Nhebuk (spoken to someone of importance)
Arabic (Umggs.) — Ana hebbek
Armenian — Yes kez si'rumem — Yes kez gesirem (eastern Armenian dialect)
Assamese (Indian) — Moi tomak bhal pau
Basque — Nere maitea (means "my love") — Maite zaitut (means "I love you")
Bassa — Mengweswe
Batak (Nordsumatra) — Holong rohangku di ho
Bavarian — I mog di narrisch gern — I mog di (right answer "i di a")
Bemba — Ndikufuna
Bengali — Aami tomaake bhaalo baashi — Ami tomay bhalobashi — Ami tomake bahlobashi — Ami tomake walobashi — Ami tomake vhalobashi
Berber — Lakh tirikh
Bicol (Philippines) — Namumutan ta ka
Bolivian Quechua — Qanta munani
Bosnian — Volim te
Brazilian / Portuguese — Eu te amo (pronounced 'eiu chee amu') — Amo-te
Bulgarian — Obicham te — As te obicham — Obozhavam te ("I love you very much")
Burmese — Chit pa de
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 (Philippines) — Gihigugma ko ikaw.
Chamoru (or Chamorro) — Hu guaiya hao
Cheyenne — Nemehotatse
Chichewa — Ndimakukonda
Chickasaw (USA) — Chiholloli (first 'i' nasalized)
Chinese — Goa ai li (Amoy dialect) — Ngo oi ney (Cantonese dialect) — Wo oi ni (Cantonese dialect) — Ngai oi gnee (Hakka dialect) — Ngai on ni (Hakka dialect) — Wa ai lu (Hokkien dialect) — Wo ai ni (Mandarin dialect) — Wo ie ni (Mandarin dialect) — Wuo ai nee (Mandarin dialect) — Wo ay ni (Mandarin dialect) — Wo ai ni (Putunghua dialect) — Ngo ai nong (Wu dialect)
Comorien — Ni sou hou vendza.
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) — Mam te (velmi) rad (male speaker, "I like you (very much)", often used and prefered) — Mam te (velmi) rada (female speaker)
Danish — Jeg elsker dig (see also dialect Friesian)
Davvi Samegiella — Mun rahkistin du.
Dusun — Siuhang oku dia
Dutch — Ik hou van je — Ik hou van jou — Ik bemin je (old fashioned) — Ik bemin jou (old fashioned) — Ik ben verliefd op je — Ik ben verliefd op jou — Ik zie je graag — Ik hol van die (Gronings a Hollands dialect)
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' (one of the Ethipians dialects, there are over 80 - see also under "Amharic")
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 — Mahal ka ta — Iniibig kita
Finnish (formal) — Mina rakastan sinua — Rakastan sinua — Mina pidan sinusta ("I like you")
Finnish — (Ma) rakastan sua — (Ma) tykkaan susta ("I like you")
French (formal) — Je vous aime
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)
Friesian — Ik hou fan dei — Ik hald fan dei
Gaelic — Ta gra agam ort — Moo graugh hoo
Galician — Querote — Queroche — Amote
Ghanaian (Akan, Twi) — Me dor wo.
Georgien (Caucasus) — Me shen mikvarkhar
German (formal) — Ich liebe Sie (rarely used)
German — Ich liebe dich — Ich hab dich lieb (not so classic and conservative)
Greek — S'ayapo (spoken "s'agapo", 3rd letter is lower case 'gamma') — Eime eroteumenos mazi sou ("I'm in love with you, male to female) — Eime eroteumenos me 'sena ("I'm in love with you, male to female) — Eime eroteumeni mazi sou ("I'm in love with you" female to male) — Eime eroteumeni me 'sena ("I'm in love with you" female to male) — Se latrevo ("I adore you") — Se thelo ("I want you", denotes sexual desire)
Greek (old) — (Ego) Philo su ('ego', for emphasis)
Greek (Ancient) — Philo se
Greenlandic — Asavakit
Guarani' — Rohiyu (ro-hai'-hyu)
Gujurati (Pakistan) — Hoon tane pyar karoochhoon. — Hoon tuney chaoon chhoon ('n' is nasal, not pronounced)
Hausa (Nigeria) — 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)
Hokkien — Wa ai lu
Hopi — Nu'umi unangwata
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 (Phillipines) — Pip-piyan taha — Pipiyan ta han shili (I like/love you very much)
Imazighan — Hamlagh kem
Indi — Mai Tujhe Pyaar Kartha Ho
Interglossa — Mi esthe philo tu.
Icelandic — Eg elska thig (pronounced 'yeg l-ska thig')
Ilocano — Ay-ayaten ka
Indonesian — Saya cinta padamu ('Saya', commonly used) — Saya cinta kamu ('Saya', commonly used) — Saya kasih saudari ('Saya', commonly used) — Saja kasih saudari ('Saya', commonly used) — Aku tjinta padamu ('Aku', not often used) (tjinta is the old written version influenced by Netherlands) — Aku cinta padamu ('Aku', not often used) — Aku cinta kamu ('Aku', not often used) (cinta is the modern written version since 1972; same for saya and saja)
Italian — Ti amo (relationship/lover/spouse) — Ti voglio bene (between friends) — Ti voglio (strong sexual meaning, "I want you" referred to the other person's body)
Irish — Taim i' ngra leat
Irish-Gaelic — t'a gr'a agam dhuit
Japanese — Kimi o ai shiteru — Aishiteru — Chuu shiteyo — Ora omee no koto ga suki da — Ore wa omae ga suki da — Suitonnen — Sukiyanen — Sukiyo — Watashi wa anata ga suki desu — Watashi wa anata wo aishithe imasu — Watashi wa anata o aishitemasu — A-i-shi-te ma-su — Watakushi-wa anata-wo ai shimasu — Suki desu (used at the first time, like for a start, when you are not yet real lovers)
Javanese — Kulo tresno
Kankana-ey (Phillipines) — Laylaydek sik-a
Kannada (Indian) — Naanu Ninnanu Preethisuthene — Naanu Ninnanu Mohisuthene
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") — qamuSHaqu' ("I love you very much") — qaparHa ("I like you") — qaparHaqu' ("I like you very much!") (words are often unnecessary as the thought is most often conveyed nonverbally with special growlings)
Korean — Dangsinul saranghee yo ("I love you, dear") — Saranghee — Nanun dangsineul joahapnida ("I like you") — Nanun dangsineul mucheog joahapnida ("I like you very much") — Nanun dangsineul saranghapnida — Nanun dangsineul mucheog saranghapnida ("I love you very much") — Nanun gdaega joa ("I like him" or "I like her") — Nanun gdaereul saranghapnida ("I love him" or "I love her") — Nanun neoreul saranghanda — Gdaereul hjanghan naemaeum alji (You know how much I love him/her.) — Joahaeyo ("I like you") — Saranghaeyo (more formal) — Saranghapanida (more respectful) — Norul sarang hae (male to female in casual relationship) — Tangsinul sarang ha o — Tangshin-ul sarang hae-yo — Tangshin-i cho-a-yo ("I like you, in a romantic way") — Nanun tangshinul sarang hamnida
Kpele — I walikana
Kurdish — Ez te hezdikhem — Min te xushvet — Min te xoshwet (Southern dialect)
Lao — Khoi hak jao — Khoi hak chao — Khoi mak jao lai ("I like you very much") — Khoi hak jao lai ("I love you very much") — Khoi mak jao (This means "I prefer you", but is used for "I love you".)
Lappish — Mun rahkistin du. (Davvi Samegiella)
Latin — Te amo — Vos amo
Latin (old) — (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 — As tave myliu (Ush ta-ve mee-lyu) (over the 's' of 'As' has to be a 'v')
Lojban — Mi do prami
Luo (Kenia) — Aheri
Luxembourgish — Ech hun dech gar
Maa — Ilolenge
Madrid lingo — Me molas, tronca!
Maiese — Wa wa
Malay — Saya cintamu — Saya sayangmu — Saya sayang anda — Saya cintakan mu (grammatically correct) — Saya sayangkan mu ( " ) — Saya chantikan awak — Aku sayang kau
Malay/Bahasa — Saya cinta mu
Malay/Indonesian — Aku sayang kau — Saya cantikan awak — Saya sayangkan engkau — Saya cintakan awak — Aku cinta pada kau — Aku cinta pada mu — Saya cinta pada mu — Saya sayangkan engkau ('engkau' often shortened to 'kau', 'engkau' is informal form and should only be used if you know the person _really_well)
Malayalam — Ngan ninne snaehikkunnu — Njyaan ninne' preetikyunnu — Njyaan ninne' mohikyunnu
Malaysian — Saya cintamu — Saya sayangmu — Saya cinta kamu
Marathi — Mi tuzya var prem karato — Me tujhashi prem karto (male to female) — Me tujhashi prem karte (female to male)
Marshallese — Yokwe Yuk
Mohawk — Konoronhkwa
Mokilese — Ngoah mweoku kaua
Mongolian — Be Chamad Hairtai (very personal)
Moroccan — Kanbhik (both mean the same, but spoken) — Kanhebek (in different cities)
Navajo — Ayor anosh'ni
Ndebele (Zimbabwe) — Niyakutanda
Nepali — Ma timi sita prem garchhu (romantic) — Ma timilai maya garchhu (less emphatic, can be used in a non romantic conext, too)
Norwegian — Jeg elsker deg (Bokmaal) — Eg elskar deg (Nynorsk) — Jeg elsker deg (Riksmaal outdated, formerly used by upper-class and conservative people)
Nyanja — Ninatemba
Op — Op lopveop yopuop
Oriya — Moon Tumakoo Bhala Paye — Moon Tumakoo Prema Kare
Oromoo — Sinjaladha — Sinjaldha
Osetian — Aez dae warzyn
Pakistani — Mujhe tumse muhabbat hai — Muje se mu habbat hai
Papiamento — Mi ta stimabo
Pedi (related to Tswana) — Kiyahurata. (pronounced as Kee-ya--hoo-rata)
Pig Latin — Ie ovele ouye (pronounced as I-ay ov-lay u-yay.)
Pilipino — Mahal kita — Iniibig kita
Polish — Kocham cie ("cie" is slangy polish and not commonly used) — Kocham ciebie — Ja cie kocham
Portuguese/Brazilian — Eu te amo (pronounced 'eiu chee amu') — Eu amo-te — Amo-te
Punjabi (Indian) — Main tainu pyar karna — Mai taunu pyar Karda
Quenya (J.R. Tolkien) — Tye-melane
Raetoromanisch — te amo
Romanian — Te iubesc — Te ador (stronger)
Russian — Ya vas lyublyu (old fashioned) — Ya tyebya lyublyu (best) — Ya lyublyu vas (old fashioned) — Ya lyublyu tyebya
Samoan — Ou te alofa outou. — Ou te alofa ia te oe. — Talo'fa ia te oe. ("Hello, from me to you") — Fia moi? ("Would you like to go to bed with me tonight?")
Sanskrit — Anurag (a higher love, like the love of music or art)
Scot-Gaelic — Tha gr`adh 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 — Kiyahurata. (pronounced as Kee-ya--hoo-rata)
Shona — Ndinokuda
Singhalese (Ceylon) — Mama oyata adarei — Mama oyaata aadareyi
Sioux — Techihhila
Slovak — Lubim ta
Slovene — Ljubim te
Somalian — Waan ku jeclahay
Spanish — Te amo — Te quiero — Te re-quiero (Argentine way to say I love you very much) — Te adoro (I adore you) — Te deseo (I desire you) — Me antojes (I crave you)
Srilankan — Mama oyata arderyi
Suaheli (Ostafrika) — Ninikupenda
Swahili — Nakupenda — Naku penda (followed by the person's name) — Ninikupenda — Dholu'o
Swedish — Jag alskar dig. (pronounced "Yag alskar day")
Syrian/Lebanese — Bhebbek (male to female) — Bhebbak (female to male)
Tagalog — Mahal kita
Tahitian — Ua Here Vau 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 (Indian) — Neenu ninnu pramistu'nnanu — Nenu ninnu premistunnanu — Ninnu premistunnanu
Thai (formal) — Phom rak khun (male to female) — Ch'an rak khun (female to male) — Phom-ruk-koon (male to female) — Chun-ruk-koon (female to male) — Phom lak kun (male to female)
Thai — Khao raak thoe (affectionate, sweet, loving)
Tswana — Ke a go rata
Tshiluba — Ndi mukusua (I love you) — Ndi musua wewe (I want you) — Ndi ne ditalala bua wewe (I have love for you)
Tunisian — Ha eh bak
Tumbuka — Nkhukutemwa
Turkish (formal) — Sizi seviyorum
Turkish — Seni seviyorum — Seni begeniyorum ("I adore you") (g has a bar on it)
Twi (Ghana) — Me dowapaa — Me dor wo
Ukrainian — Ya tebe kokhayu — Ja tebe kokhaju (real true love) — Ja vas kokhaju — Ja pokokhav tebe — Ja pokokhav vas
Urdu (Indien) — Main tumse muhabbat karta hoon — Mujhe tumse mohabbat hai — Mujge tumae mahabbat hai — Kam prem kartahai
Vai — Na lia
Varmlandska — Du ar gorgo te mag
Venda — Ndi a ni funa
Vietnamese — Anh yeu em (male to female) — Em yeu anh (female to male) — Toi yeu em
Volapuk — Lofob oli.
Votic — Mia suvatan sinua.
Vulcan (Mr.Spock) — Wani ra yana ro aisha
Walloon — Dji vos veu volti (lit. I like to see you) — Dji vos inme (lit. I love you) — Dji v'zinme
Welsh — Rwy'n dy garu di. — Yr wyf i yn dy garu di (chwi)
Wolof — Da ma la nope — Da ma la nop (da malanop)
Yiddish — Kh'hob dikh lib — Kh'ob dikh holt — Ikh bin in dir farlibt
Yucatec Maya — 'in k'aatech (the love of lovers) — 'in yabitmech (the love of family, which lovers can also feel; it indicates more a desire to spoil and protect the other person)
Yugoslavian — Ja te volim
Zazi (kurdish) — Ezhele hezdege
Zulu — Mina Ngithanda Wena (rarely used; means "Me, I love you.") — Ngiyakuthanda (pronounced as NGee-ya--koo--tanda)
Zuni — Tom ho'ichema | |
|