In Gus's case, the subjunctive is appropriate.
I love you in danish
In Danish
I love you = Jeg elsker dig
ikon
Less formal Indonesian: (if thirty years hasn't fogged my brain)
Aku chinta para ku
or as Pak Pohan, our guru, told us just say 'chinta ku', it's like saying,
"C'm'ere, babe."
Joe
Re: Say "I love you" in multiple languages
"kickycan"
I spend most of my time writing for forums about everything and anything under the sun. Therefore, I have no life other than looking forward to sit in front of my PC. In addition, I subject other users to my continuous opinion.
One, I must love myself above all, or I have forgotten that there is a world out there ready to explore.
Do you think I should go out more?
Yes, he replied for Kicky, but how do you say "I love you."?
Joe
How to say 'I love you' in 26 languages.
English: I Love You
Spanish: Te Amo
French: Je T'aime
German: lch Liebe Dich
Japanese: Ai Shite Imasu
Italian: Ti Amo
Chinese: Wo Ai Ni
Swedish: Jag Alskar
Louisiana,
South Carolina,
Virginia,
Alabama,
Arkansas,
Kansas,
Oklahoma,
Texas,
North Carolina,
Georgia,
Tennessee,
Idaho,
Missouri,
Mississippi,
Montana,
West Virginia,
Kentucky, and
Parts of Florida: Nice Ass, Get in the truck
Kenkamken - Yup'ik Eskimo
"I love you"
i love you in different languages
Dutch: ik hou van jou!
Tamil: naan uniya virumbiren
Mizo language: Ka hmangaih che
Paite language: Kon it , kon ngai
Madarin(Putonghua): wo3 ai4 ni3 我爱你.
with wo3 meaning I
ai4 love
ni3 you
how to say "i love you" with local accent?
How to say"I love you" in elf language
cav, nice german translation.
Norwegian: Jeg elsker deg
Danish: Jeg elsker dig
Sweedish: Jag har dig kjær
Dutch: Ik hoe van je
(Æ is the twentyseventh letter of the scandinavian alphabet. From letter 1 to 26 it's the same, and then there are three letters added: Æ Ø Å.
Æ- pronounced like the A in back.
Ø- like the U in summer
Å like the O in love)
Norwegian: "Jeg elsker deg" or "Jeg er glad i deg."
Swedish: "Jag älskar dig" or "Jag tycker om dig" (I believe you can also say "Jag har dig kär," but it isn't so common).
Maybe it's different for Danish, because they pronounce everything weird, but we here in Norway (and the Swedish) pronounce ø/ö kinda like the sound in "bird", without the "r" sound. And å is pronounced like the o in no. And in Swedish the letters go ...z, å, ö, ä, rather than ...z, æ, ø, å like in Norwegian and Danish. Æ/Ä is pronounced sometimes in Swedish like the e in egg (i.e. in "jeg älskar dig").