hello ralf,
I dont know if am really a romantic person,
but my dad always told me that am a sweet daughter,
is sweet is different from romantic?
hehehe(laughing) can you tell me?
lieka mia
hello ralf,
I dont know if am really a romantic person,
but my dad always told me that am a sweet daughter,
is sweet is different from romantic?
hehehe(laughing) can you tell me?
lieka mia
Hello lieka mia,
I would say that most people don’t necessarily attach a romantic notion to sweet (or cute) things/people. You could ask your father whether he thought of you as romantic when he called you ‘sweet’. It was probably he who was being romantic when he said you were sweet
:lol:
Ya your right Ralf,
my dad told me that am always be romantic to him for am
his daughter. then I try to ask him if he saw me romantic in
treating other people, he told me, “yes, you are.” but I don’t
know how did I look like a romantic one.
hahaha(laughing) maybe I am in others eye but not on mind,
lieka
not sure if anyone’s done this yet, but let’s look at different ways to say “I love you”. Here are some I know – spellings in some will be approximate or (in the case of Russian) an attempt at phonetics:
English: I love you
French: J’ taime
Spanish: Te amo
German: Ich liebe dich
Italian: Ti amo
Russian: Ya dipa looblyoo
Klingon: Tok urk uck
hehe
Which sounds the most romantic?
:lol:
Let’s all adopt that one!
:lol:
.
hehe
Bak Her!
(Anyone speak ancient Egyptian?)
Ya tibya loobloo
I like the way foreigners pronounce that phrase (in movies, that is ).
They never seem to be able to master that oo sound in loobloo and it sounds funny
cool beans
I won’t murder strasvutra then. hehe
English language is very romantic but i love Russian to (my native language)
Ya Tebya Lyubly…
Ti mne nravishsya…
Zharko tut…
Does “tut” mean “shut up”?
hehe