Παρασκευή 30 Νοεμβρίου 2007

Σαγαπώ σε διάφορες γλώσσες

Πείτε Σ'αγαπώ είναι η γαλήνη της καρδιάς, σε ποιά γλώσσα όμως; διαβάστε παρακάτω, όλο και κάποια θα σας κάνει...


Afrikaans — Ek is lief vir jou— Ek het jou lief
Akan (Ghana) — Me dor wo
Albanian — Te dua— Te dashuroj— Ti je zemra ime
Alentejano (Portugal) — Gosto de ti, porra!
Alsacien (Elsass) — Ich hoan dich gear
Amharic (Aethiopian) — Afekrishalehou— Afekrischalehou— Ewedishalehu (male/female to female) — Ewedihalehu (male/female to male)
Apache — Sheth she~n zho~n (nasalized vowels like French, '~n' as in French 'salon')
Arabic (formal) — Ohiboke (male to female)— Ohiboki (male to female)— Ohibokoma (male or female to two males or two females)— Nohiboke (more than one male or females to female)— Nohiboka (male to male or female to male)— Nohibokoma (male to male or female to two males or two females)— Nohibokom (male to male or female to more than two males)— Nohibokon (male to male or female to more than two females)
Arabic (proper) — Ooheboki (male to female)— Ooheboka (female to male)
Arabic — Ana behibak (female to male)— Ana behibek (male to female)— Ahebich (male to female)— Ahebik (female to male)— Ana ahebik— Ib'n hebbak— Ana ba-heb-bak— Bahibak (female to male)— Bahibik (male to female)— Benhibak (more than one male or female to male)— Benhibik (male to male or female to female)— Benhibkom (male to male or female to more than one male)— Nhebuk (spoken to someone of importance)
Arabic (Umggs.) — Ana hebbek
Armenian — Yes kez si'rumem— Yes kez gesirem (eastern Armenian dialect)
Assamese (Indian) — Moi tomak bhal pau
Basque — Nere maitea (means "my love")— Maite zaitut (means "I love you")
Bassa — Mengweswe
Batak (Nordsumatra) — Holong rohangku di ho
Bavarian — I mog di narrisch gern— I mog di (right answer "i di a")
Bemba — Ndikufuna
Bengali — Aami tomaake bhaalo baashi— Ami tomay bhalobashi— Ami tomake bahlobashi— Ami tomake walobashi— Ami tomake vhalobashi
Berber — Lakh tirikh
Bicol (Philippines) — Namumutan ta ka
Bolivian Quechua — Qanta munani
Bosnian — Volim te
Braille — : : ..: ..: ..-.. .: : ": .., : .: ;
Brazilian / Portuguese — Eu te amo (pronounced 'eiu chee amu')— Amo-te
Bulgarian — Obicham te— As te obicham— Obozhavam te ("I love you very much")
Burmese — Chit pa de
Cambodian — Kh_nhaum soro_lahn nhee_ah— Bon sro lanh oon
Canadian French — Sh'teme (spoken, sounds like this)— Je t'aime ("I like you")— Je t'adore ("I love you")
Catalan — T'estimo (Catalonian)— T'estim (Mallorcan)— T'estime (Valencian)— T'estim molt ("I love you a lot")
Cebuano (Philippines) — Gihigugma ko ikaw.
Chamoru (or Chamorro) — Hu guaiya hao
Cheyenne — Nemehotatse
Chichewa — Ndimakukonda
Chickasaw (USA) — Chiholloli (first 'i' nasalized)
Chinese — Goa ai li (Amoy dialect)— Ngo oi ney (Cantonese dialect)— Wo oi ni (Cantonese dialect)— Ngai oi gnee (Hakka dialect)— Ngai on ni (Hakka dialect)— Wa ai lu (Hokkien dialect)— Wo ai ni (Mandarin dialect)— Wo ie ni (Mandarin dialect)— Wuo ai nee (Mandarin dialect)— Wo ay ni (Mandarin dialect)— Wo ai ni (Putunghua dialect)— Ngo ai nong (Wu dialect)
Comorien — Ni sou hou vendza.
Corsican — Ti tengu cara (male to female)— Ti tengu caru (female to male)
Creol — Mi aime jou
Croatian (familiar) — Ja te volim (used in proper speech)— Volim te (used in common speech)
Croatian (formal) — Ja vas volim (used in proper speech)— Volim vas (used in common speech)— Ljubim te (in todays useage, "I kiss you", 'lj' pronounced like 'll' in Spanish, one sound, 'ly'ish)
Croatian (old) — Ljubim te (may still be found in poetry)
Czech — Miluji te (a downwards pointing arrowhead on top of the 'e' in te, which is pronounced 'ye')— Miluju te! (colloquial form)— Mam te (velmi) rad (male speaker, "I like you (very much)", often used and prefered)— Mam te (velmi) rada (female speaker)
Danish — Jeg elsker dig (see also dialect Friesian)
Davvi Samegiella — Mun rahkistin du.
Dusun — Siuhang oku dia
Dutch — Ik hou van je— Ik hou van jou— Ik bemin je (old fashioned)— Ik bemin jou (old fashioned)— Ik ben verliefd op je— Ik ben verliefd op jou— Ik zie je graag— Ik hol van die (Gronings a Hollands dialect)
Ecuador Quechua — Canda munani
English — I love you— I adore you— I love thee (used only in Christian context)
Esperanto — Mi amas vin
Estonian — Mina armastan sind— Ma armastan sind
Ethiopian — Afgreki' (one of the Ethipians dialects, there are over 80 - see also under "Amharic")
Farsi (old) — Tora dust mi daram
Farsi — Tora dost daram ("I love you")— Asheghetam— Doostat daram ("I'm in love with you")— Man asheghetam ("I'm in love with you")
Filipino — Mahal ka ta— Iniibig kita
Finnish (formal) — Mina rakastan sinua — Rakastan sinua— Mina pidan sinusta ("I like you")
Finnish — (Ma) rakastan sua— (Ma) tykkaan susta ("I like you")
French (formal) — Je vous aime
French — Je t'aime ("I love you")— Je t'adore ("I love you", stronger meaning between lovers)— J' t'aime bien ("I like you", meant for friends and family, not for lovers)
Friesian — Ik hou fan dei — Ik hald fan dei
Gaelic — Ta gra agam ort— Moo graugh hoo
Galician — Querote— Queroche— Amote
Ghanaian (Akan, Twi) — Me dor wo.
Georgien (Caucasus) — Me shen mikvarkhar
German (formal) — Ich liebe Sie (rarely used)
German — Ich liebe dich— Ich hab dich lieb (not so classic and conservative)
Greek — S'ayapo (spoken "s'agapo", 3rd letter is lower case 'gamma')— Eime eroteumenos mazi sou ("I'm in love with you, male to female)— Eime eroteumenos me 'sena ("I'm in love with you, male to female)— Eime eroteumeni mazi sou ("I'm in love with you" female to male)— Eime eroteumeni me 'sena ("I'm in love with you" female to male)— Se latrevo ("I adore you")— Se thelo ("I want you", denotes sexual desire)
Greek (old) — (Ego) Philo su ('ego', for emphasis)
Greek (Ancient) — Philo se
Greenlandic — Asavakit
Guarani' — Rohiyu (ro-hai'-hyu)
Gujurati (Pakistan) — Hoon tane pyar karoochhoon.— Hoon tuney chaoon chhoon ('n' is nasal, not pronounced)
Hausa (Nigeria) — Ina sonki
Hawaiian — Aloha wau ia 'oe— Aloha wau ia 'oe nui loa ("I love you very much")
Hebrew — Anee ohev otakh (male to female)— Anee ohevet otkha (female to male)— Anee ohev otkha (male to male)— Anee ohevet otakh (female to female) ('kh' pronounced like Spanish 'j', Dutch 'g', or similiar to French 'r')
Hindi — Mai tumase pyar karata hun (male to female)— Mai tumase pyar karati hun (female to male)— Mai tumse pyar karta hoon— Mai tumse peyar karta hnu— Mai tumse pyar karta hoo— Mai tujhe pyaar kartha hoo— Mae tumko peyar kia— Main tumse pyar karta hoon— Main tumse prem karta hoon— Main tuze pyar karta hoon ('n' is nasal, not pronounced)
Hokkien — Wa ai lu
Hopi — Nu'umi unangwata
Hungarian — Szeretlek— Te'gedet szeretlek ("It's you I love and no one else")— Szeretlek te'ged ("It's you I love, you know, you", a reinforcement)(The above two entries are never heard in a normal context.)
Ibaloi (Phillipines) — Pip-piyan taha— Pipiyan ta han shili (I like/love you very much)
Imazighan — Hamlagh kem
Indi — Mai Tujhe Pyaar Kartha Ho
Interglossa — Mi esthe philo tu.
Icelandic — Eg elska thig (pronounced 'yeg l-ska thig')
Ilocano — Ay-ayaten ka
Indonesian — Saya cinta padamu ('Saya', commonly used)— Saya cinta kamu ('Saya', commonly used)— Saya kasih saudari ('Saya', commonly used)— Saja kasih saudari ('Saya', commonly used)— Aku tjinta padamu ('Aku', not often used)(tjinta is the old written version influenced by Netherlands)— Aku cinta padamu ('Aku', not often used)— Aku cinta kamu ('Aku', not often used)(cinta is the modern written version since 1972; same for saya and saja)
Italian — Ti amo (relationship/lover/spouse)— Ti voglio bene (between friends)— Ti voglio (strong sexual meaning, "I want you" referred to the other person's body)
Irish — Taim i' ngra leat
Irish-Gaelic — t'a gr'a agam dhuit
Japanese — Kimi o ai shiteru— Aishiteru— Chuu shiteyo— Ora omee no koto ga suki da— Ore wa omae ga suki da— Suitonnen— Sukiyanen— Sukiyo— Watashi wa anata ga suki desu— Watashi wa anata wo aishithe imasu— Watashi wa anata o aishitemasu— A-i-shi-te ma-su— Watakushi-wa anata-wo ai shimasu— Suki desu (used at the first time, like for a start, when you are not yet real lovers)
Javanese — Kulo tresno
Kankana-ey (Phillipines) — Laylaydek sik-a
Kannada (Indian) — Naanu Ninnanu Preethisuthene— Naanu Ninnanu Mohisuthene
Kikongo — Mono ke zola nge (mono ke' zola nge')
Kiswahili — Nakupenda— Nakupenda wewe— Nakupenda malaika ("I love you, (my) angel")
Klingon — bangwI' SoH ("You are my beloved")— qamuSHa ("I love you")— qamuSHaqu' ("I love you very much")— qaparHa ("I like you")— qaparHaqu' ("I like you very much!") (words are often unnecessary as the thought is most often conveyed nonverbally with special growlings)
Korean — Dangsinul saranghee yo ("I love you, dear")— Saranghee — Nanun dangsineul joahapnida ("I like you")— Nanun dangsineul mucheog joahapnida ("I like you very much")— Nanun dangsineul saranghapnida— Nanun dangsineul mucheog saranghapnida ("I love you very much")— Nanun gdaega joa ("I like him" or "I like her")— Nanun gdaereul saranghapnida ("I love him" or "I love her")— Nanun neoreul saranghanda— Gdaereul hjanghan naemaeum alji (You know how much I love him/her.)— Joahaeyo ("I like you")— Saranghaeyo (more formal)— Saranghapanida (more respectful)— Norul sarang hae (male to female in casual relationship)— Tangsinul sarang ha o— Tangshin-ul sarang hae-yo— Tangshin-i cho-a-yo ("I like you, in a romantic way")— Nanun tangshinul sarang hamnida
Kpele — I walikana
Kurdish — Ez te hezdikhem— Min te xushvet— Min te xoshwet (Southern dialect)
Lao — Khoi hak jao— Khoi hak chao— Khoi mak jao lai ("I like you very much")— Khoi hak jao lai ("I love you very much")— Khoi mak jao (This means "I prefer you",but is used for "I love you".)
Lappish — Mun rahkistin du. (Davvi Samegiella)
Latin — Te amo— Vos amo
Latin (old) — (Ego) Amo te ('Ego', for emphasis)
Latvian — Es tevi milu (pronounced 'es tevy meelu')('i in 'milu' has a line over it, a 'long i')— Es milu tevi (less common)
Lebanese — Bahibak
Lingala — Nalingi yo
Lisbon lingo — Gramo-te bue', chavalinha!
Lithuanian — As tave myliu (Ush ta-ve mee-lyu) (over the 's' of 'As' has to be a 'v')
Lojban — Mi do prami
Luo (Kenia) — Aheri
Luxembourgish — Ech hun dech gar
Maa — Ilolenge
Macedonian — Te sakam (a little stronger than "I like you")— Te ljubam ("I really love you")— Jas te sakam ('j' sounds like 'y' in May)— Pozdrav ("Greetings")
Madrid lingo — Me molas, tronca!
Maiese — Wa wa
Malay — Saya cintamu— Saya sayangmu— Saya sayang anda— Saya cintakan mu (grammatically correct)— Saya sayangkan mu ( " )— Saya chantikan awak— Aku sayang kau
Malay/Bahasa — Saya cinta mu
Malay/Indonesian — Aku sayang kau— Saya cantikan awak— Saya sayangkan engkau— Saya cintakan awak— Aku cinta pada kau— Aku cinta pada mu— Saya cinta pada mu— Saya sayangkan engkau ('engkau' often shortened to 'kau', 'engkau' is informal form and should only be used if you know the person _really_well)
Malayalam — Ngan ninne snaehikkunnu— Njyaan ninne' preetikyunnu— Njyaan ninne' mohikyunnu
Malaysian — Saya cintamu— Saya sayangmu— Saya cinta kamu
Marathi — Mi tuzya var prem karato— Me tujhashi prem karto (male to female)— Me tujhashi prem karte (female to male)
Marshallese — Yokwe Yuk
Mohawk — Konoronhkwa
Mokilese — Ngoah mweoku kaua
Mongolian — Be Chamad Hairtai (very personal)
Moroccan — Kanbhik (both mean the same, but spoken)— Kanhebek (in different cities)
Navajo — Ayor anosh'ni
Ndebele (Zimbabwe) — Niyakutanda
Nepali — Ma timi sita prem garchhu (romantic)— Ma timilai maya garchhu (less emphatic, can be used in a non romantic conext, too)
Norwegian — Jeg elsker deg (Bokmaal)— Eg elskar deg (Nynorsk)— Jeg elsker deg (Riksmaal outdated, formerly used by upper-class andconservative people)
Nyanja — Ninatemba
Op — Op lopveop yopuop
Oriya — Moon Tumakoo Bhala Paye— Moon Tumakoo Prema Kare
Oromoo — Sinjaladha— Sinjaldha
Osetian — Aez dae warzyn
Pakistani — Mujhe tumse muhabbat hai— Muje se mu habbat hai
Papiamento — Mi ta stimabo
Pedi (related to Tswana)— Kiyahurata. (pronounced as Kee-ya--hoo-rata)
Pig Latin — Ie ovele ouye (pronounced as I-ay ov-lay u-yay.)
Pilipino — Mahal kita— Iniibig kita
Polish — Kocham cie ("cie" is slangy polish and not commonly used)— Kocham ciebie— Ja cie kocham
Portuguese/Brazilian — Eu te amo (pronounced 'eiu chee amu')— Eu amo-te— Amo-te
Punjabi (Indian) — Main tainu pyar karna— Mai taunu pyar Karda
Quenya (J.R. Tolkien) — Tye-melane
Raetoromanisch — te amo
Romanian — Te iubesc— Te ador (stronger)
Russian — Ya vas lyublyu (old fashioned)— Ya tyebya lyublyu (best)— Ya lyublyu vas (old fashioned)— Ya lyublyu tyebya
Samoan — Ou te alofa outou.— Ou te alofa ia te oe.— Talo'fa ia te oe. ("Hello, from me to you")— Fia moi? ("Would you like to go to bed with me tonight?")
Sanskrit — Anurag (a higher love, like the love of music or art)
Scot-Gaelic — Tha gr`adh agam ort
Serbian (formal) — Ja vas volim (used in proper speech)— Volim vas (used in common speech)— Ljubim te (in todays useage, "I kiss you", 'lj' pronounced like 'll' in Spanish, one sound, 'ly'ish)
Serbian (familiar) — Ja te volim (used in proper speech)— Volim te (used in common speech)
Serbian (old) — Ljubim te (may still be found in poetry)
Serbocroatian — Volim te— Ljubim te— Ja te volim ('j' sounds like 'y' in May)
Sesotho — Kiyahurata. (pronounced as Kee-ya--hoo-rata)
Shona — Ndinokuda
Singhalese (Ceylon) — Mama oyata adarei— Mama oyaata aadareyi
Sioux — Techihhila
Slovak — Lubim ta
Slovene — Ljubim te
Somalian — Waan ku jeclahay
Spanish — Te amo— Te quiero— Te re-quiero (Argentine way to say I love you very much)— Te adoro (I adore you)— Te deseo (I desire you)— Me antojes (I crave you)
Srilankan — Mama oyata arderyi
Suaheli (Ostafrika) — Ninikupenda
Swahili — Nakupenda— Naku penda (followed by the person's name)— Ninikupenda— Dholu'o
Swedish — Jag alskar dig. (pronounced "Yag alskar day")
Syrian/Lebanese — Bhebbek (male to female)— Bhebbak (female to male)
Tagalog — Mahal kita
Tahitian — Ua Here Vau Ia Oe— Ua here vau ia oe
Tamil — Naan unnai kadalikiren— Nan unnai kathalikaren— Ni yaanai kaadli karen ("You love me")— N^an unnaki kathalikkinren ("I love you")— Nam vi'rmberem
Telugu (Indian) — Neenu ninnu pramistu'nnanu— Nenu ninnu premistunnanu— Ninnu premistunnanu
Thai (formal) — Phom rak khun (male to female)— Ch'an rak khun (female to male)— Phom-ruk-koon (male to female)— Chun-ruk-koon (female to male)— Phom lak kun (male to female)
Thai — Khao raak thoe (affectionate, sweet, loving)
Tswana — Ke a go rata
Tshiluba — Ndi mukusua (I love you)— Ndi musua wewe (I want you)— Ndi ne ditalala bua wewe (I have love for you)
Tunisian — Ha eh bak
Tumbuka— Nkhukutemwa
Turkish (formal) — Sizi seviyorum
Turkish — Seni seviyorum— Seni begeniyorum ("I adore you") (g has a bar on it)
Twi (Ghana) — Me dowapaa— Me dor wo
Ukrainian — Ya tebe kokhayu— Ja tebe kokhaju (real true love)— Ja vas kokhaju— Ja pokokhav tebe— Ja pokokhav vas
Urdu (Indien) — Main tumse muhabbat karta hoon— Mujhe tumse mohabbat hai— Mujge tumae mahabbat hai— Kam prem kartahai
Vai — Na lia
Varmlandska — Du ar gorgo te mag
Venda — Ndi a ni funa
Vietnamese — Anh yeu em (male to female)— Em yeu anh (female to male)— Toi yeu em
Volapuk — Lofob oli.
Votic — Mia suvatan sinua.
Vulcan (Mr.Spock) — Wani ra yana ro aisha
Walloon — Dji vos veu volti (lit. I like to see you)— Dji vos inme (lit. I love you)— Dji v'zinme
Welsh — Rwy'n dy garu di.— Yr wyf i yn dy garu di (chwi)
Wolof — Da ma la nope— Da ma la nop (da malanop)
Yiddish — Kh'hob dikh lib— Kh'ob dikh holt— Ikh bin in dir farlibt
Yucatec Maya — 'in k'aatech (the love of lovers)— 'in yabitmech (the love of family, which lovers can also feel; itindicates more a desire to spoil and protect the other person)
Yugoslavian — Ja te volim
Zazi (kurdish) — Ezhele hezdege
Zulu — Mina Ngithanda Wena (rarely used; means "Me, I love you.")— Ngiyakuthanda (pronounced as NGee-ya--koo--tanda)
Zuni — Tom ho'ichema

Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:

Online τώρα στο blog της Mania...

who's online