1. Tebhasheeli: “Dig my grave”
2. Raytak tkaffeni : “May you put me in the coffin
>Nothing says “I love you” more than asking your lover to wrap you inside a coffin then burying you. Just don’t…read into it too much.
3. To’borny : “May you bury me”
4. Bmoot feek: “I die in you”
5. Allah yekhod min omre w yaa’teek: “May Allah take years from my life … and give them to you”
>This is one you’ve probably heard from your aging grandmother who just wants to see you live a long life. But it is common among lovers, too. Why can’t God just give us both more years? Why, oh why.
6. Tatla’ ala qabri: “May you walk on my grave”
Yes please! Tell me again how you want me to put you in a coffin, then bury you, then walk back and forth on your grave. I swoon.
7. Teshkol aassi: “May you always put flowers on my grave”
>This very Syrian saying is another example of how Arabs find love in death. The Myrtle plant or الآس is an evergreen plant commonly put on grave. But in this morbid saying it means: “I love you so much that I wish to die so you can visit my grave and lay Myrtle on every day!”… er… yes, me too?