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  1. Jun 5, 2012 · I learned that " love of " and " love for " are in a certain way synonymous. Please take a look at the contexts. a. His love of music was evident. Vs His love for music was evident. b. My love of my wife is huge. Vs My love for my wife is huge. Meaning intended: love of/love for: the love you have for something/somebody.

  2. Jun 23, 2015 · Jun 23, 2015. #7. "they fell for each other " ( meaning "they fell in love with each other") To fall for (phrasal verb tr.) [a person or thing]: to be captivated or carried away by; to be unable to resist the attraction of. Or, in a negative sense, to be taken in by, to be fooled by. Last edited: Jun 23, 2015.

  3. Oct 2, 2012 · Sep 30, 2012. #9. origumi said: Root ר-ח-מ is also the one used many times in the Unqelos translation for Hebrew א-ה-ב = love. In the Syriac versions of the New Testament forms from the root r-ḥ-m are generally used for φιλία, φιλέω etc., and forms from ḥ-b-b for ἀγάπη, ἀγαπάω etc., but there are exceptions.

  4. Jan 5, 2016 · British English. Jan 5, 2016. #4. 'I love eating' is what I say using the gerund, for whatever it is that I actually like or love doing. To me, a BE speaker, the infinitive is used for a future with or without the conditional 'I would ...+ to (verb) followed by a real or understood 'if' clause. "I'd love to sleep with you if you weren't married."

  5. Oct 18, 2014 · The first two lines of the dialog are fine; the third line makes absolutely no sense. "I would love to" clearly conveys that B accepts A's invitation with pleasure. "I would love to if I could" is not at all what "I would love to" means. (I think you must mean "It's only 8:00..." However, that statement does not make sense after what has just ...

  6. Feb 24, 2010 · Feb 24, 2010. #4. It is unlikely to be pronounced with a comma. The most common use would be spoken with continuous intonation all the way through. A: I \love you. B: Aw, I love you \too. Here the word 'too' has the main accent of the sentence (a falling tone) because it's the main thing you're saying. ('I love you' is in the background because ...

  7. May 8, 2010 · To be fond of someone or something is to quiet like it. Whatever it is makes you comfortable and gives some pleasure. To say you love is more serious. Two things though: (1) You can use love loosely. I love chocolate, for example, is different to saying I have found my true love. (2) You can, and usually would, be fond of someone you love.

  8. Jul 3, 2018 · teacherdehnavi said: Hi. e.g I love to buy it VS I would love to buy it. You would use "I love to buy" for something you already do on a regular basis: I love to buy fruit here -- they have the freshest produce. Use "I would love to buy" for something that hasn't happened but that you would like to happen: I would love to buy a new car.

  9. Feb 28, 2010 · Feb 26, 2010. #2. A couple of things: 1) I don't know of any equivalent expression because love handles are to the side of the body, not the front, such as pot belly, beer belly, etc., and 2) while love handles may have sexual connotations for some, many people just imagine the condition without having prurient thoughts.

  10. Aug 9, 2017 · Here "love" and "remove" end alternate lines. In the prologue to Romeo and Juliet, in every group of 4 lines, lines 2 and 4 rhyme and lines 1 and 3 also rhyme. The rhyming word pairs are: dignity/mutiny, scene/unclean, foes/overthrows, life/strife, love/remove, rage/stage, attend/mend.

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