
Irish?

as there is no owner to this sentence, nobody will answer you unless they notice your message on the board, as I did myself.
If you know it is Irish, you may adopt it and change the flag; However, the irish flag doesn't exist yet, since too few sentences have been created so far. But an irish tag exists with a few sentences.
If you confirm this is irish, I'll tag it accordingly.

That's odd. I saw that it was created a day ago and assumed that it was freshly owned. I don't know enough Irish to say whether it's correct or not; therefore, I am not going to adopt it. In any case, it's not CycL. If a native speaker can't adopt (and correct) it (the double accent mark, at the very least, is not standard form), I'd rather see it deleted.

I made some research and I think it is misspelled Irish indeed. I tagged it as Irish and somebody will review this at some point...

It needs @needs native check
(by someone less rusty than me)
I'm 99% sure this is a classic mistake, and the correct construction is "Tá grá agam duit."

@Shiawase this looks like an okay construction, albeit not a direct translation of 'I love you'.
https://www.teanglann.ie/en/fgb/gr%C3%A1
" Bheith i ngrá le duine, to be in love (with s.o.)."
I've added a link to https://tatoeba.org/eng/sentences/show/499751
'I'm in love with you'
If a uber-member wishes to remove the link between this [557579] and "I love you" [1434] I don't think there'll be anything lost.
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Sentence text
License: CC BY 2.0 FRLiest van biedroagen
This sentence was initially added as a translation of sentence #1434
touvougd deur niq, October 10, 2010
Hinwezen deur niq, October 10, 2010
Hinwezen deur danepo, October 17, 2010
bewaarkt deur niq, October 25, 2010
Hinwezen deur kadwallan, March 17, 2013
Hinwezen deur kadwallan, March 17, 2013
Hinwezen deur EoghanM, May 20, 2019
Hinwezen deur SteCymru14, August 20, 2019