How to say I Love You in 100 Languages!!!

English - I love you
Afrikaans - Ek het jou lief
Albanian - Te dua
Arabic - Ana behibak (to male)
Arabic - Ana behibek (to female)
Armenian - Yes kez sirumen
Bambara - M’bi fe
Bangla - Aamee tuma ke bhalo aashi
Belarusian - Ya tabe kahayu
Bisaya - Nahigugma ako kanimo
Bulgarian - Obicham te
Cambodian - Soro lahn nhee ah
Cantonese Chinese - Ngo oiy ney a
Catalan - T’estimo
Cheyenne - Ne mohotatse
Chichewa - Ndimakukonda
Corsican - Ti tengu caru (to male)
Creol - Mi aime jou
Croatian - Volim te
Czech - Miluji te
Danish - Jeg Elsker Dig
Dutch - Ik hou van jou
Esperanto - Mi amas vin
Estonian - Ma armastan sind
Ethiopian - Afgreki’
Faroese - Eg elski teg
Farsi - Doset daram
Filipino - Mahal kita
Finnish - Mina rakastan sinua
French - Je t’aime, Je t’adore
Gaelic - Ta gra agam ort
Georgian - Mikvarhar
German - Ich liebe dich
Greek - S’agapo
Gujarati - Hoo thunay prem karoo choo
Hiligaynon - Palangga ko ikaw
Hawaiian - Aloha wau ia oi
Hebrew - Ani ohev otah (to female)
Hebrew - Ani ohev et otha (to male)
Hiligaynon - Guina higugma ko ikaw
Hindi - Hum Tumhe Pyar Karte hae
Hmong - Kuv hlub koj
Hopi - Nu’ umi unangwa’ta
Hungarian - Szeretlek
Icelandic - Eg elska tig
Ilonggo - Palangga ko ikaw
Indonesian - Saya cinta padamu
Inuit - Negligevapse
Irish - Taim i’ ngra leat
Italian - Ti amo
Japanese - Aishiteru
Kannada - Naanu ninna preetisuttene
Kapampangan - Kaluguran daka
Kiswahili - Nakupenda
Konkani - Tu magel moga cho
Korean - Sarang Heyo
Latin - Te amo
Latvian - Es tevi miilu
Lebanese - Bahibak
Lithuanian - Tave myliu
Malay - Saya cintakan mu / Aku cinta padamu
Malayalam - Njan Ninne Premikunnu
Mandarin Chinese - Wo ai ni
Marathi - Me tula prem karto
Mohawk - Kanbhik
Moroccan - Ana moajaba bik
Nahuatl - Ni mits neki
Navaho - Ayor anosh’ni
Norwegian - Jeg Elsker Deg
Pandacan - Syota na kita!!
Pangasinan - Inaru Taka
Papiamento - Mi ta stimabo
Persian - Doo-set daaram
Pig Latin - Iay ovlay ouyay
Polish - Kocham Ciebie
Portuguese - Eu te amo
Romanian - Te ubesk
Russian - Ya tebya liubliu
Scot Gaelic - Tha gra\dh agam ort
Serbian - Volim te
Setswana - Ke a go rata

Sign Language - ,\,,/
(represents position of fingers when signing’I Love You’)

Sindhi - Maa tokhe pyar kendo ahyan
Sioux - Techihhila
Slovak - Lu`bim ta
Slovenian - Ljubim te
Spanish - Te quiero / Te amo
Swahili - Ninapenda wewe
Swedish - Jag alskar dig
Swiss-German - Ich lieb Di
Tagalog - Mahal kita
Taiwanese - Wa ga ei li
Tahitian - Ua Here Vau Ia Oe
Tamil - Nan unnai kathalikaraen
Telugu - Nenu ninnu premistunnanu
Thai - Chan rak khun (to male)
Thai - Phom rak khun (to female)
Turkish - Seni Seviyorum
Ukrainian - Ya tebe kahayu
Urdu - mai aap say pyaar karta hoo
Vietnamese - Anh yeu em (to female)
Vietnamese - Em yeu anh (to male)
Welsh - ‘Rwy’n dy garu
Yiddish - Ikh hob dikh
Yoruba - Mo ni fe
 

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How we can use failure to help us achieve success

Here are six lessons, which build on one another, that show how we can use failure to help us achieve success.

1. Understand Failure’s Potential
Any failure, even the worst failure we can imagine, has the potential to be good and worthwhile… if we can learn from it and build upon it. James Joyce rightly wrote, “Mistakes are the portal for discovery.” But we have to make the commitment to discover… to look at that failure and build upon it. If we don’t, then failure can’t work its magic… and we’ve let ourselves down!

“Failure has been good to us,” Ali says of Xuqa. “Each big failure has helped us make our company better… and has opened our eyes to another success.”

“A failure is a man who has blundered but is not capable of cashing in on the experience.” –Elbert Hubbard

2. Surround Yourself with Others Who Understand the Importance of Failure
The world is full of people who don’t understand the benefits of failure. They tell us to “play it safe”, that our “dreams aren’t worth the effort”, and that our goals are “impossible”. We need to stay away from these people… and instead find people who believe in the strength of the human spirit, and who believe in us!

“A life spent making mistakes is not only more honorable but more useful than a life spent in doing nothing.” –George Bernard Shaw

“I cannot give you the formula for success, but I can give you the formula for failure: which is: Try to please everybody.” –Bill Cosby

3. Expect and Embrace Failure
Failure is an inevitable part of life and success… sometimes we get it in large doses and sometimes in smaller ones. But if we understand that we alone have the power to make our own failures positive or negative, then embracing failure isn’t so hard. It becomes manageable… and beautiful… and challenging… and worthwhile.

Thomas Edison knew better. He didn’t try to invent the phonograph thinking he’d get it right on the first try. Rather, he knew that “Genius is 1% innovation and 99% perspiration,” as he said. And he was willing to sweat a little bit and fail thousands of times before he got it right. It was that kind of commitment to massive failure that gave him the opportunity to achieve many great successes.

4. Learn From Failure
Failure can only be helpful when we decide to learn from it. And learning doesn’t happen by default or osmosis. Rather, it requires that we take the time to understand what went right and wrong, and then figure out how to replicate the good stuff, and eliminate the bad stuff.

“Every failure teaches a man something, if he will learn…” –Charles Dickens

“If I find ten thousand ways something won’t work, I haven’t failed. I am not discouraged, because every wrong attempt discarded is another step forward. Just because something doesn’t do what you planned it to do doesn’t mean it’s useless.” –Thomas Edison

5. Use Knowledge to Move Forward
Learning isn’t good enough. It’s one thing to know all twelve steps necessary to recover from alcoholism, for instance, but it’s another thing entirely to make the choice to recover from alcohol abuse by using those steps. Learning from our failures is important… acting on that knowledge is even more important!

Alexander Fleming didn’t have to keep the mold that seemed to be eating away at the bacteria. But he did. He didn’t have to then run tests on it. But he did. Those were important steps, but they were steps that wouldn’t have mattered if he didn’t take one final step: to search for practical applications of the bacteria-eating mold. It was his willingness to apply the knowledge learned from his failure that enabled him to discover the applications of penicillin.

6. Don’t Give Up
Oftentimes, in life, we think we’re doing the right things… but we aren’t getting the results we want! We don’t move forward as quickly as we thought we would, or perhaps, we don’t move forward at all. So we consider giving up. We think that maybe failure isn’t everything it’s chalked to be. The most important secret of failing successfully is this: believe in the of failure power even when it doesn’t seem to be working.

“There are two mistakes one can make along the road to truth - not going all the way, and not starting.” –Buddha

“Many of life’s failures are people who did not realize how close they were to success when they gave up.” –Thomas Edison

Conclusion
If we want to succeed in whatever we do, then we need to learn how to welcome failures into our lives, and use them as building blocks for our successes.

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