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Latin for "I love you"?
The Latin for "I love you" is Te amo.

Example: I said? te? Amo, can someone tell me what she is talking about? Said.

I said, I love you. Didn't anyone tell me what she said?

The difference between te amo and vos amo: Simple numbers are different from complex numbers.

Te amo means I love you, which is what one person said to another; And vos amo means I love you, which is what one person says to many people.

Extended data:

Latin noun adjectives have six cases: subject, genus, harmony, object, grasping and shouting.

"nominative case" (indicating subject or predicative)

Genitivus, which means all relations, is the same as English possessive case.

"dativus" (meaning indirect object or other indirect grammatical meaning)

"Accusative" (meaning direct object, also known as accusative or dual)

"Ablation" (used with some prepositions, or used alone to indicate tools and means)

"vocativus" (used to address someone)

Iocativus has no such grammatical category in Latin, but there are still a few ancient forms, mainly place names and some common rankings, so it is not listed as one of Latin cases.

Multi-grid is also translated as off-grid, which is formed by merging multi-grid, tool grid and orientation grid.

Because case change has expressed the grammatical relationship between nouns and verbs in Latin, Latin word order is highly free and does not follow the subject-predicate-object format. For example, Chinese, English and French can only have one word order, that is, subject, predicate and object. But in Latin, there are six word orders, namely:

1, Pat Ahmad Filioud.

2. Pater Frum Ahmad.

3. Frum Ahmad Pate.

4. Frum Pate Ahmad.

5. Ahmad Pate Frum.

6. Ahmad Filim Pate.