E pei oe o so'u uso. E pei oe o so'u uso. . . .
I doubt very much if the above is regular usage , )
Not sure of brother, but a casual greeting in friendship and family is sole. Pronounced
soh-lay, quickly, both barells.
Not for strangers, especially not in Samoa!
. . .
sister saying it to a sister: "uso" brother saying it to a sister: "tuafafine"
"Uso, o a'u o le Samoa" is a male is speaking. If a woman is speaking, you say, "Tuagane, o a'u o le Samoa".
tuagane ( g in pronounced as a n and t is pronounced as a g) sometime you can say Uso
O matou o le aiga.
Uce is Samoan slang for "brother / bro" like a homeboy.
E te iloa e fa'apefea ona ou fiafia iai.
Not necessarily dumb, but dumb looking, childish in their ways, like not all there
Sounds like someone said this to you or near you and was telling someone to stop. "Lava loa" loosely translates from Samoan to English as "Thats enough now".
Translation: I like/love you.
Maybe after finding the translation of your question you can add "how do you translate I dont want a black eye and a fula maka?"
It means I love you like a sister or brother, not like a spouse.
I have Samoan friends and I think they told me it's something like when we say oh my god just a saying for when your suprised or amazed. Edit: The previous answer is correct. "Oka" is also "raw fish" which is a Samoan dish using coconut cream and the flesh of raw fish.
The Twi translation of the phrase "I don't like" is "me yɛ da gye ani".
The Scottish translation of brother is brathair. It is pronounced as braa'her since 'the' in Scottish is pronounced like an 'h' in English.
What did you buy?
The literal translation of the French phrase 'comme ci comme ca' is 'Like this like that', when looking further into the meaning, the term is used to show a neutral feeling such as saying the words 'so-so'.