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  1. Feb 2, 2016 · In your case, "I've loved" is the more correct solution. When dealing with past tense, such as sharing stories about former/current relationships, you will use words such as have or had. I have loved you ever since I met you.

  2. Use "I have loved" when you want to express that you started loving someone or something in the past and that feeling continues up to the present moment. It implies a connection between the past and the present. Examples: I have loved her since the day we met. He has loved that book for years. They have loved each other for a long time.

  3. Nov 28, 2020 · 'I have/'ve loved you' needs a time marker => e.g. I've always loved you. or I've loved you for ages. or I've loved you since we first met. 'I love you' doesn't need any time marker.

  4. Learn the difference between present perfect and simple past tenses in English with examples of "I have loved him before" and "I loved him". See how the tenses affect the meaning and the speaker's attitude.

  5. "Have been -ing" is something that happened in the past and is still happening in the present.|@lukasz "loved her" is past tense, finished action. "Have been" signifies you started loving her in the past and are still loving her.|@lukasz present perfect describes a past action up until now.

  6. Mar 3, 2016 · In a sentence such as "I loved her" the verb form loved is no past participle. It is the second base form, which is used only for past tense. Regular verbs have the base forms love/loved/loved, an irregular verb is write/wrote/written.

  7. Jan 15, 2021 · In this week’s Dispatches from The Secret Library, Dr Oliver Tearle explores the meaning and origin of a well-known proverb ‘Better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all.’ It’s become a proverb, and proverbs are, usually, authorless.