"I love you" in all languages of the world! “I love you” in different languages of the world How to say I love you in Ossetian.
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HowThe same word sounds exotic in different languages! Of the many languages on our planet, only the language of love can convey the feeling of great inspiration! This is a feeling that doesn’t need translation, you don’t need to look for it, it comes on its own when you don’t expect it.....
Abkhazian - Sara bara bziya bzoy.
Avarsky - Di mun ekula.
Adyghe - Se ora plagun.
Azerbaijani - Ben seny seviyorum.
Albanian - Ti dua.
Altai - Une dua ti.
Amharic - Afeggere ante.
English - I love you (Ay love u).
Arabic (for a woman) - Ana akhebek.
Arabic (for men) - Ana ahebak.
Armenian - Yes kez sirumem.
Assamese - Moi tomak bhal pau.
Afghan - Dusat Dorem.
African - Ek hat yo lif.
Bavarian - I can di narrisch gern.
Bari (Sudanese language) - Nan nyanyar do.
Basque - Maite zaitut.
Bashkir - Min hine yaratyu.
Belarusian - I'm shaking my head.
Bengali - Ami tomake bhalobashi.
Berber - Lakh tirikh.
Burmese - Chena tingo chhi""iti.
Bulgarian - Obicham ti.
Bolivian - Quechua qanta munani.
Buryat - Bi shamai durlakha.
Hungarian - Seretlek.
Vietnamese - Toy yeu em.
Hawaiian - Aloha I""a Au Oe.
Gaelic - Ta gra agam ort.
Dutch - Ik huid van yu.
Greenlandic - Asavakit.
Greek - S""agapo.
Georgian - Me shen mikvarhar.
Gujarat (state of India) - Hoon tane pyar karoochhoon.
Darginsky - Khiu nab rigakhure.
Danish - Jeg elsker dit.
Dolganski - Men enichan taptychan.
Dravidian language of South India - Naanu Ninnanu Mohisuthene.
Dungansky - Vo zhiai ni.
Jewish, Hebrew (to a woman) - Ani ohev otah (ani ohev otah).
Jewish, Hebrew (to a man) - Ani ohevet otha (ani ohevet otha).
Zulu - Mena Tanda Wena.
Ingush - Hyo sona duk eza.
Indonesian - Sayya mentinta kou.
Iranian - Me ture dus""at do""rem.
Irish - Thaim in grabh leat.
Icelandic - Eg elska thig.
Spanish - Yo te amo.
Italian - Ti amo.
Kabardino-Circassian - Se ue lagoons.
Kazakh - Men seny zhaksy kyoryomen.
Kalmytsky - Bee chi durta fleas.
Cambodia - Bon sro lanh oon.
Canadian French - Sh"" theme.
Cantonese - Ngo oi ney.
Kara-Latyk - K "" tybytyk.
Catalan - T""estim.
Catalan (Valencian dialect) - T""estime.
Catalan (Catalan dialect) - T""estimo.
Kenyan - Tye-mela""ne.
Kyrgyz - Men seni suyom.
Komi - Me radate tene.
Korean - Sa lang hea.
Kumyk - Men seni suemen.
Kurdish - Ez te hezdikhem.
Laksiy - Na vin hira hun.
Laotian - Khoi huk chau.
Latvian - Es tevi milu.
Latgalian - Es tave mili.
Latin - Tu amare.
Latvian - Es tevi milu.
Lebanese - Bahibak.
Lisbon - Gramo-te bue"".
Lithuanian - Ash tave mile.
Macedonian - Yas tebe sakam.
Malaysian - Saya cintamu.
Malay - Saya cintakan mu.
Maltese - Inhobboh.
The Mandarin Chinese dialect is Wo Ai Ni.
Marathi - Mi tuzya var prem karato.
Mari - My tyimym yorats.
Megrelian - Ma si mnyork shoi ti.
Moldavian - Te iubesc.
Mongolian - Bi tand khairtai.
Mordovian - Mon Ton Kelktyan or Mon Vechkan.
Navaja - Ayor anosh""ni.
German - Ich liebe dich.
Silent English (the pronunciation of this word form is similar to the movement of the lips
when saying the phrase I love you) - Olive Juice
Nenets - Man hamzagav sit.
Nepali - Ma timilai maya garchu.
Nivkhsky - No wonder.
Nogai - Men seni suemen.
Norwegian - Yay elske dai.
Ossetian - Az daima uvarzon.
Pakistani - Mujhe Tumse Muhabbat Hai.
Punjabi - Mai taunu pyar karda.
Persian - Tora dost daram.
Polish - Koham cie.
Portuguese - Te a""mo.
Portuguese (Brazil) - I te amo.
Roman - Te iu besc.
Romanian - Te iubesc.
Russian - I love you.
Serbo-Croatian - I will fly.
Serbian - Volim te.
Sinhalese -Mama oyata adarei.
Syriac (woman) - Bhebbek.
Syriac (for men) - Bhebbak.
Sioux - Techihhila.
Slovak - We love it.
Slovenian - We love you.
Somalia - Aniga ku esel.
Swahili - Na kupenda + name.
Sudanese - Nan nyanyar do.
Tagalog - Ako siya umibig.
Tajik - Man turo dost medoram.
Thai (gently, lovingly) - Khao Raak Thoe.
Thai (formally male-to-female) - Phom Rak Khun.
Thai (formally female-male) - Ch""an Rak Khun.
Tamil - Nan unnai kadaliren.
Tatarsky - Min sini yarataman.
Tat (Mountain Jewish) - Me ture hostenum or Tu mere haz omoreni.
Telugu - Neenu ninnu pra""mistu""nnanu.
Tuvan - Man seni ynakshir.
Tunisian - Ha eh bak.
Turkish - Ben sana seviyorum.
Turkmen - Men seni seyarin.
Udmurt - Yaratyshke mon tone.
Uzbek - Men seni sevaman.
Ukrainian - I tebe kohai.
Urdu - Main Tumse Muhabbat Karta Hoon.
Welsh - ""Rwy""n dy garu di.
Farsi - Tora dust midaram.
Farsi (Persian) - Doostat dAram.
Filipino - Iniibig Kita.
Finnish - Rakastan Sinua.
Flemish - Ik zie oe geerne.
French - Zhe tem.
Frisian - Ik hou fan dei.
Khakassian - Min sin khynara.
Hindi - Mai tumsey pyar hum.
Hindi (female to male) - Mai tumase pyar karati hun.
Hindi (male to female) - Mai tumase pyar karata hun.
Hopi - Nu"" umi unangwa""ta.
Croatian - Ljubim te.
Chechen - Suna hyo eza.
Czech - Mom te glad.
Chuvash - Ene ese yurat.
Swabian - I could dik gerne.
Swedish - Yad elskir day.
Swiss-German - Ch""ha di ga"rn.
Scots Gaelic - Tha gradh agam ort.
Sri Lankan - Mama Oyata Arderyi.
Evenki - Bi sine fyv.
Ecuador - Canda munani.
Esperanto - Mi amas sin.
Estonian - Ma armastan sind.
Yugoslavian - Ya te volim.
Javanese - Kulo tresno.
Yakut - Min enigin taptybyn.
Japanese - Anata wa dai sku des.
Japanese (first declaration of love) - Suki desu.
There is probably no person who would not want to hear these words from his lover or beloved. And even if you speak different languages, even if your significant other tells you “Ndinokuda!” (Shona) or “mon tone yaratyshko” (Udmurt), and not the already familiar “I love you”, “I love you”, “Je t"aime” or “Ich liebe dich”, in terms of intonation and the sparkle of your eyes you are still the same you will understand the main thing.
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On the eve of Valentine's Day, employees decided to conduct a little research and find out how people in different parts of our planet confess their love to each other. Let's be honest, the results obtained surprised us in some ways, and in some ways even amused us. We will not delve into traditions and rituals; we will only touch on the words themselves.
Due to the grammatical and stylistic characteristics of some languages, the phrase “I love you” will sound differently depending on whether it is spoken by a man or a woman. For example, in Japanese, a man will say "Aishiteru yo" and a woman will say "Aishiteru wa." In Arabic, the gender of the addressee already matters, that is, when addressing a man, you will say “uhibukya”, and when addressing a woman, “uhibuky”. But everything is even more complicated in Hebrew, because here both the gender of the speaker and the gender of the addressee matter: a man will say “ani oev otah” to a woman, a woman will say “ani oevet otha” to a man, a man will say “ani oev otha” to a man, and a woman will say “ani” to a woman. oevet otah” (as they say, there are plenty of options).
In some languages, the colloquial and formal versions of this phrase will also differ. For example, in Bulgarian “az te obicham” is a literal but very formal version, so in colloquial speech the shorter version “obicham te” is used. The same thing happens in Arabic, Greek, Persian, Portuguese and many other languages.
Language |
Writing |
Transcription |
A comment |
|
Azerbaijani |
mən səni sevirəm |
Maine Sani Seviram |
||
Albanian |
unë të dashuroj |
yeon tae dua en te dashuroy |
I love you (with the verb to want) I love you (with the verb to wish, to love) |
|
English |
||||
Arab |
أحبك |
masculine feminine |
||
Armenian |
es kes sirum em. |
|||
Bulgarian |
az te obicham obicham te |
az te obicham obicham those |
verbatim, but too formal |
|
better, more suitable for Valentine's Day, this is how they confess their love to each other | ||||
Belorussian |
I'm pooping |
I'm pooping |
||
Hungarian |
serathlek |
|||
Greek |
σ΄αγαπώ/ σας αγαπώ |
sagapo / sas aghapo |
informal / formal |
|
Georgian |
me shen mikvarhar |
|||
yay elske(r) give |
pronunciation is approximate, r is like an overtone |
|||
אני אוהב אותך
אני אוהבת אותך |
ani oev otah ani oevet otkha |
man to woman woman to man |
||
Indonesian |
saya cinta kepada Anda |
saya chinta kepada anda |
||
Irish |
tá grá agam ort |
ta gra agemort |
||
Spanish |
||||
Italian |
||||
Kazakh |
men senі zhaksy koremіn |
men seni zhaksy koremin |
||
Catalan |
||||
Chinese |
我愛你[我爱你] |
Mandarin |
||
Korean |
||||
Latin |
||||
Latvian |
Es Tevy Milu |
|||
Lithuanian |
ash go a mile |
|||
Macedonian |
te sakam, te љubam |
te sakam, te lyubam |
||
Malay |
saya sayangkan kamu |
sayankan kamu |
||
German |
Ih Libe Dih |
|||
Dutch |
ik how van yau |
|||
Norwegian |
yay elskar give yay elsker give |
|||
Persian |
dust-at daram then I will be glad to give you gifts (man) shoma ra dost daram |
I love you (truncated common form) I love you (full form) I love you (full form) |
||
Polish |
koham chen |
e is a nasal sound; in Old Church Slavonic it corresponds to the small yus |
||
Portuguese |
amo-te, eu te amo |
amu ti, eu ti amu, |
For Brazilians, the more typical form, especially on Valentine's Day, is tequero [te keru]; if the Brazilian himself is asked to transcribe a word with a final o, then he will write [o], but in fact it is not exactly this sound, although it does not go into [u], as in Portuguese tequeromuito [te keru muitu] - I love you very much Options: quero-te [keru-ti] teamo [ti amu], amo-te [amu-ti] - this is more “pathetic”, with this word, most often, they love their homeland, wife, of course, child; after all, the main meaning of the previous word is “I want” (but, as in Spanish, “I want” in this context does not sound as vulgar as in Russian, it is now quite a decent form); Usually the pronoun eu (I) is not used with a personal verb. If you do not omit it, you get a logical emphasis on this pronoun: not someone, but I love. |
|
Romanian |
||||
I love you |
I love you |
|||
Serbian |
||||
Slovak |
we have mercy on you mom you're glad mom you're glad |
man - woman woman to man |
||
Slovenian |
glad te imam I'm glad you're the imam |
man - woman woman to man |
||
ninakupenda |
||||
ผมรักคุณ ฉันรักคุณ |
phom4 rak3 khun chan4 rak3 khun |
man - woman woman to man note: 4 - rising tone, 3 - high tone |
||
naenu ninnu praemisthunnanu |
||||
Turkish |
seni seviorum |
|||
Ukrainian |
I love you I love you |
I'm telling you I love you |
||
میں آپ سے محبت کَرتا ہوں میں آپ سے محبت کرتی ہوں |
may aap semuhabbat karta huu May aap se muhabbat karti huu. |
man - woman (with great respect for the speaker); woman to man (with great respect for the speaker); |
||
minä rakastan sinua |
minya rakastan sinua |
|||
Flemish |
ik zie oe geerne |
ikzie oe Geerne |
||
French |
||||
may tumhe bahutchaahtaa huu. May tum se pyaar kartaa huu. may tumhe bahut chaahtii huu. May tum se pyaar karti huu. |
says the man says the woman the letter h serves in this case to convey the guttural “g” |
|||
Croatian |
||||
mom tae glad |
official version colloquial version |
|||
Swedish |
I'm Elscar Day |
|||
Esperanto |
mi amas wine |
|||
Estonian |
ma armastan sind |
ma armastan sint |
||
Javanese |
aku tresnasliramu. |
aku tresnasliramu |
||
Japanese |
好きです/ 好きだ |
ski des/ski yes Dayski des aishiteru yo aishiteru ua |
formal / informal (literal translation “I like you”, but this is how they declare love in Japan due to the mentality); the same option with increased emotional coloring (=like you very much); colloquial version, male speech; colloquial version, female speech; |
|
Burmese |
chit pas de |
|||
Kyrgyz |
men seni suyom |
men seni xuyom |
||
Mongolian |
bi chamd hairtai |
bi chamd hartai |
||
Tajik |
man turo dost medoram |
man turo dest medoram (letter? - something between “o” and “e”). |
literary version |
|
Tatar |
min blue yaratam |
min sine yaratam |
less often: min sine soyam [min sine shoyam] |
|
Uzbek |
men seni sevaman |
man seni sevaman |
men seni sevaman |
|
Laotian (Lao-Isan) |
Khoi Hak Tiao |
|||
Philippine |
waved whale |
|||
naanu ninnanu preetisutene |
||||
Lebanese |
||||
Javanese |
aku tresnasliramu |
aku tresnasliramu |
||
Surinamese (Tongo) |
mi lobi yu |
|||
Taiwanese |
wa ga hey li |
|||
ua here vau ia oe |
oo-ahhey-rayee-ahoh-hey |
|||
Bengal |
ami apnake bhalobashi ami tomake bhalobashi ami toke bhalobashi |
formally informally very informal |
||
Bhojpuri |
ham tose pyaar karila |
|||
Tagalog |
mahal kita |
|||
Hawaiian |
aloha wau iā ʻoe |
aloha wa oh |
||
Icelandic |
e elska gyh |
|||
Malayalam |
nyan ninne premikkunnu nyan ninne mohikkunnu nyan ninne knowhikkunnu |
|||
mayhe tuzhyaya var prem aahe; me tuyhashi prem karto; mi tuzya var prem karato |
man to woman woman to man |
|||
Nepali |
ma timalai maayaa garchhu |
|||
for a hundred sara mina kavom |
||||
ndinowhere! |
||||
Sinhalese |
ma ma o ya ta aa da re yi |
|||
Somali |
wan ku jecelahay |
vaan ku yeselahai |
||
Tamil |
naan unnai kadalikiren / naan unnai kadalikiren |
|||
Tibetan |
nga kairangla gavpo yo |
|||
Vietnamese |
to a man to a woman |
|||
Welsh |
dw i"n dy garu di / rwy"n dy garu di |
dvin di gare di / rvin di gare di |
||
their hob dih lib their libe dih |
literal translation of the first expression “I like you!”, the second “I love you!” |
|||
mo nifẹẹ rẹ (mo ni ife re) |
mo nife re |
Probably, each of us wants to hear the phrase: “I love you”... But few people think about how these words sound in other languages. Friends, for you the most complete list of declarations of love in different languages of the world. But maybe you have something to supplement it with?
Sometimes you really want to surprise and please your soulmate with something unusual. Imagine how romantic it is, lying naked with your loved one in front of the fireplace, with sparkling wine poured into glasses, leaning towards it and whispering in his ear: “Te Amo.” This is how you pronounce “I love” in Spanish. It's great to know how these wonderful words sound in different countries and in different languages :)
Ukrainian - I'll fuck you.
Azerbaijani - Men seni sevirem.
Altai - Man seni turar.
English - I love you.
Arabic - ana bhebbak ktir.
Armenian - Yes Kes Sirum Em.
Basque - Nere Maitea.
Bavarian - I lieb di.
Belarusian - I'm shaking my head.
Bengali - Ami tomake bhalobashi.
Berber - Lakh tirikh.
Bulgarian - Obicham te.
Hungarian - Szeretlek te"ged.
Vietnamese - Toi ye u em.
Gagauz - byan seni benem.
Gaelic - Tha gradh agam ort.
Dutch - Ik houd van jou.
Greek - S" ayapo.
Georgian - ME SHEN MIKHVARKHAR.
Danish - Jeg elsker dig.
Hebrew - Ani ohev otach (a man speaks to a woman).
Hebrew - Ani ohevet otcha (woman speaks to man).
Indie - Mai tujhe pyaar kartha hoo.
Indian - Nenu Ninnu Premistunnan.
Irish - Taim i" ngra leat.
Icelandic - Eg elska thig.
Spanish - Te Amo.
Italian - Ti amo.
Kazakh - Men seni jaksi korem.
Kalmytsky - Bi chamd durtav.
Cambodian - Bon soro lanh oon.
Cantonese - Ngo oi ney.
Catalan - T "estim.
Chinese - Wo ie ni.
Kurdish - Ez te hezdikhem.
Laotian - Khoi huk chau.
Latvian - es teve mjilo.
Madrid slang - Me molas, tronca.
Maltese - Inhobbok.
Moroccan - Kanbrik.
Mohawk - Konoronhkwa.
Navajo - Ayor anosh"ni.
German - Ich liebe Dich.
Nepali - Ma timilai maya garchu, Ma timilai man parauchu.
Ossetian - Aez dae warzyn.
Pakistani - Muje se mu habbat hai.
Persian - Tora dost daram.
Polish - Ja cie kocham.
Portuguese - Eu te amo.
Roman - Te iu besc.
Romanian - Eu te iubesc.
Russian - I love you.
Serbo-Croatian - Volim te.
Serbian - Lubim te.
Sioux - Techihhila.
Slovakian - Lubim ta.
Slovenian - Ljubim te.
Sudanese - Nan nyanyar do.
Swahili - Naku penda.
Tatarsky - Min sine yaratam.
Tajik - MAN TURO DUST MEDORAM.
Tunisian - Ha eh bak.
Turkish - Seni seviyorum. Ben seni cok seviorum.
Uzbek - Man sizni sevaman.
Uyghur - MYAN SENI YAKHSHI KORIMYAN.
Urdu - Mujge tumae mahabbat hai.
Persian - Doostat daram.
Farsi (Persian) - doostat dAram.
Filipino - Mahal ka ta.
Finnish - Mina rakastan sinua.
Flemish - Ik zie oe geerne.
French - Je t"aime.
Hindi - mei tumsey pyar karti hum (girl to guy), mey tumsey pyar karta hum (boyfriend to girl)
Croatian - Ljubim te.
Gypsy - ME HERE KAMAM.
Chechen - suna hyo veza (girl says to guy), sun hyo ez (guy says to girl)
Czech - Miluji te.
Scottish Gaelic - Tha gradh agam ort.
Sri Lankan - Mama Oyata Arderyi.
Swedish - Jag a"lskar dig.
Swedish - Iaj Alskar Dej.
Esperanto - Mi amas vin.
Yugoslavian - Ya te volim.
Yakut - MIN EIGIN TAPTYYBYN.
Japanese - Kimi o ai shiteru.
Say these three magic words to your loved ones more often: “I love you,” and the world around you will shine with new colors and become a little kinder).