"We dance. I love you, my love. I love you"
(from Bailamos, Enrique Iglesias, 1999)
To break it down :
Bailamos is "We Dance"
Te quiero is "I Love You" (literally I want you, variant of te amo)
Amor mio is "My Love"
The root word 'mio' means 'less.'
It means " Thank you, my little love." .
Yes. mio can be used as an abbreviation of million.
Patience my god.
oh MI-oh ba-BI-no CA-roh
It must be:¿Bailamos? Te quiero amor mío, te quiero --- Shall we dance? I love you my love, I love you.Amour is more French
Hello, my love; I love you very much!
I love you, my love
More information about Amor Mio can be found on Wikipedia, the official Mexican website for Amor Mio and several television programming based sites associated with Mexican television.
Lo correcto sería:Te quiero, eres mío; durante mucho tiempo serás mío. --- I love you, you are mine. You will be mine for long time (informal you, singular, in masculine gender)
"Tu eres el mio amor sin ti soy nada" is Spanish and it translates to "You are my love, without you I am nothing."
that doesn't make any sense together...amor= to loveyo te amo means: I love youthu is not a word in Spanish.es= iscorazon= heart.Put it together and it doesn't make a lot of sense. Maybe intended to be I love you with all my heart?
The translation for 'my sweet love' would be mi dulce amor o tierno amor
Te Amo Means 'I Love You' In Spanish And Latin.
Well I know that amor in spanish means love. Go to an Italian to English translation site,I learned some spanish from there. I am latinamerican. Mi amor (spanish): my love/honey/darling Amore mio (Italian): my love
These words are Spanish. I'm just learning the language at the moment so this sequence of the words doesn't make sense to me but this is definitely Spanish. Te = You Quiero = I want Mío = Mine
Amor mio, no se (accent on the 'e') = I don't know, my love. Tu piensa(s) (que) tu eres mas smart que.... = You think you are smarter than.... (I suspect the 'Me' in 'Mean' is supposed to be the end of the above sentence)