You can say "Ψ’Ω Ψ―Ω" (amadan) in Farsi to mean "come".
well i know the words but not how to put it together .. Mann = Me Dhost or Rafeeq = friend You = tu ok i know these words because their in my language too but we sentence our words differently to that in Farci
In Bengali, "too" can mean "also" or "as well".
Panj - in Farsi Hamsa - in Arabic Cinq - in French Hamesh - in Hebrew Finef - in Yiddish (German too?)
In Hawaiian, you can say "A 'oukou ho'i" to mean "and to you too."
You can say "Ψ’Ω Ψ―Ω" (amadan) in Farsi to mean "come".
He is famous because he is a model and he is very HANDSOME too
well i know the words but not how to put it together .. Mann = Me Dhost or Rafeeq = friend You = tu ok i know these words because their in my language too but we sentence our words differently to that in Farci
According to Islam, all the prophets were faithfulness. and for Shia, all Imams were faithfulness too. because all of them were infallible. some other Muslims like Salman Farsi, Abuzar Ghefari and ... were good too. but the number is few.
In Bengali, "too" can mean "also" or "as well".
if you want to say like "there is too many cars in the street" you say " ye aalame mashin يه عالمه ماشين" but if you say like " he has too many cars" you say ziadi mashin daare زيادى ماشين داره. the last part is also the literal one, so ماشين زيادى means too many cars
Panj - in Farsi Hamsa - in Arabic Cinq - in French Hamesh - in Hebrew Finef - in Yiddish (German too?)
Too & fro
Persians, especially of the upper classes, were expected to study Arabic in school; among other things, Persia was, and still is, a Muslim country, and Muslims believe that the Kor'an should not be translated, but read in the original Arabic. So, there was quite a tradition of reading and writing in Arabic. The Baha'i scriptures are a blend of Arabic and Farsi much like present-day English is a blend of Anglo Saxon Germanic and Latin. Some Baha'i scriptures are in pure Farsi.
too sexual
too not listen too or pay attention too.
Too is a synonym of also. Either is accompanied by or in a sentence. This means that when you use either you mean one or the other, and when you use too you mean both. These words are not the same.