French for "I adore you" not "I love you". "I love you" is "j'taime"
In Franch J'adore (I adore you) is stronger than J'taime (I love you).
In Franch J'adore (I adore you) is stronger than J'taime (I love you).
by SKiB August 31, 2005
French for "I adore you" not "I love you". "I love you" is "j'aime"
In French J'adore (I adore you) is stronger than J'aime (I love/like you).
In French J'adore (I adore you) is stronger than J'aime (I love/like you).
by Micah M December 13, 2005
by surreal_x May 02, 2005
by Gumba Gumba June 01, 2004
J'adore is literally translated as "I adore".
J'aime is "I love".
In order to say "I adore you", one would say "Je t'adore", which is <Je> meaning "I"; <tu> meaning "you"; and <adore> meaning "adore". You drop the "u" in "tu" because adore begins with a vowel.
J'aime is "I love".
In order to say "I adore you", one would say "Je t'adore", which is <Je> meaning "I"; <tu> meaning "you"; and <adore> meaning "adore". You drop the "u" in "tu" because adore begins with a vowel.
by Language Ninja August 06, 2009
A wonderful female fragrance by Christian Dior that will definitely make a girl a real guy magnet. Guys will definitely be attracted to the girls who wear this sweet and sensual aroma on their bodies.
Darn dude, that pretty girl who walked by, she has got to be wearing J'adore. Lets go hit on her. I love that smell on girls.
by Seantronik May 06, 2010
Frank: Those shoes are just j'adorable!
Tom: If you ever say that again, I will kill your boyfriend.
Tom: If you ever say that again, I will kill your boyfriend.
by Joey702 September 22, 2008