ANSWERS: 20
  • Here you go: http://www.freelang.net/expressions/iloveyou.html EDIT: Upon further review those expressions refer to the word love as a verb. Will try to find another link with translations to the noun.
  • Look it up here. http://babelfish.altavista.com/
  • Latin: amo (verb), Amor (noun) Korean: sarang (noun) saranghada (verb) Japanese: ai Dutch: nul, liefde French: amour German: null, Liebe Italian: amore Spanish: cero, nada Philipine: Mahal Swedish: HÄLSNINGAR Norwegian: ELSKEDE Danish: ELSKE Finnish: RAKASTAA Amour is a deformation of the Sanskrit and Telugu word "Prema".
  • Cantonese: Ngoy Japanese: Ai (noun only) Japanese: Aisuru (verb only) Latin: Amore (verb only) Mandarin: Ai Russian: LyubOf The "Ai" is pronounced like "eye." Sorry, that's pretty much all I know.
  • i only know english and afrikaans afrikaans is - lief
  • http://www.stvalentines.net/howiloveyouissaid.htm
  • Hebo is Arabic or bahebuk is i love you.
  • here you go: http://www.italki.com a language exchange site
  • Russian -- lyubov', pronounced "Lyoo-bOff" with a soft "f".
  • Haha "I ONLY know Spanish, Portuguses, Italian,.........."
  • In Danish, love as a noun is "kærlighed" As a verb (to love) it's "at elske"
  • The hebrew word for love is ahava.
  • miÅ‚ość - is the word LOVE in Polish
  • Well, I recon that you could look on the google translate :P But in Swedish. it's karlek (it's supposed to be an a with two dotts above it but I don't have that, sorry :)
  • in hungarian it is pronounced em mad lock that is not the spelling but that is how its pronounced. my ex wife is hungarian and it means to worship to give your heart to.
  • 1) On this page, you will find various translations. Consider first that the word love can be a noun or a verb, and that it could have various meanings. The translations would them possibly be different. For instance, here are some translation for the noun "love" with the meaning "strong affection": "Afrikaans: liefde Albanian: dashuri (sq) f Arabic: حُبّ (ħubb), مَحَبّة (maħabba) Aramaic: ܚܘܒܐ Armenian: Õ½Õ¥Ö€ (ser) Bosnian: ljubav (bs) f Breton: karantez f Catalan: amor m Cebuano: gugma Chinese: Simplified: 爱 (ài), 爱情 (àiqíng) Traditional: æ„›, 愛情 Chuvash: юрату Croatian: ljubav (hr) f Czech: láska (cs) f Danish: kærlighed (da) c Dutch: liefde (nl) f Esperanto: amo (eo) Estonian: armastus (et) Ewe: lÉ”lɔ̃ Filipino: pag-ibig, pagmamahal Finnish: rakkaus (fi) French: amour (fr) m German: Liebe (de) f, Zuneigung (fr) f Greek: αγάπη (el) (agápi) Hawaiian: aloha Hebrew: אהבה (he) (ahavá) f Hiligaynon: higugma Hindi: प्यार (pyār) m, प्रेम (prem) m, इश्क़ (išq) m, मुहब्बत (muhabbat) f Hungarian: szeretet (hu) Icelandic: elska (is), ást (is) Indonesian: cinta (of someone), suka (of something) Interlingua: amor Irish: grá (ga) m Italian: amore (it) m Japanese: æ„› (あい, ai), 愛情 (あいじょう, aijō) Khmer: សេចក្ដីស្រឡាញ់ (saych-gday sraluñ) Korean: 사랑 (sarang), ì• ì • (aejeong) Kyrgyz: сүйүү (süyüü), макаббат (maqabbat) Latin: amor (la) m, caritas (la) f Latvian: mÄ«lestÄ«ba (lv) f, mÄ«la (lv) f Lithuanian: meilÄ— (lt) Luxembourgish: Léift Maori: aroha (mi) Meänkieli: rakhaus Norwegian: kjærlighet (no) Novial: amo Old Prussian: mÄ«li Persian: عشق (eshq), مهر (mehr) Polish: miÅ‚ość (pl) f Portuguese: amor (pt) Punjabi: ਪਿਆਰ (piār) m Romanian: iubire (ro), dragoste (ro), amor (ro) Russian: любовь (ru) (ljubóv’) f Samoan: alofa (sm) Scottish Gaelic: gràdh m, spèis f Serbian: Cyrillic: љубав f Roman: ljubav f Slovak: láska (sk) f Slovene: ljubezen (sl) f Spanish: amor (es) m Swedish: kärlek (sv) c Tagalog: pag-ibig; pagmamahal Tamil: காதல் (Kadhal) (sexual love between a man and a woman), அன்பு, பாசம் Tatar: Cyrillic: ярату Roman: yaratu Telugu: ప్రేమ (prEma) Thai: ความรัก (khwamrak) Turkish: sevgi (tr) Ukrainian: кохання (uk) (kokhannja), любов (uk) (ljubov) Urdu: محبت (muhabbat) f, عشق ('išq) m, پیار (pyār) m Uzbek: sevgi, muhabbat Vietnamese: tình yêu (vi) Welsh: cariad (cy) m West Frisian: leafde" Source and further information: http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/love 2) However long, this list does not contain not all different languages. According to this page, there are 7,299 languages (without counting the dialects): http://www.ethnologue.com/language_index.asp The list on the following page will allow you to say "I love you" in 113 different languages: http://www.theholidayspot.com/valentine/wish101languages.htm
  • greek-agApee (pronounced as read) ukranian-kokhAiu (iu as you)
  • Idk how to say, but I can give you a preview of how they are written... Albanian dashuria Bulgarian обичам Galician/Catalan/Portugese/Spanish amor Chinese(S/T)/Japanese 爱 Croatian ljubav Czech/Slovak láska Danish kærlighed Dutch liefhebben Estonian armastus Filipino pagmamahal Finnish rakastaa French aimer German liebe Greek αγάπη Hindi प्यार Hungarian szerelem Indonesian cinta Italian amore Korean 사랑 Latvian mÄ«lestÄ«ba Lithuanian meilÄ— Maltese imħabba Norwegian kjærlighet Polish miÅ‚ość Romanian iubire Russian любовь Serbian љубав Slovenian ljubezen Swedish kärlek Thai รัก Turkish sevmek Ukrainian любов Vietnamese yêu
  • Well if using the Maori language of New Zealand it would be? ruri short love ditty, poem. aroha nui much love, with deep affection - often used in signing off letters to friends. ai to copulate, have sex, make love. murimuri aroha to yearn for.
  • pyar in punjabi (Pe-yar)

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