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  1. Jun 5, 2012 · 1. 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 · Hi, What's correct to say: fall in love for (someone/something) or fall in love with (someone/something) ? For instance, John and Mary fell in love in Texas and fell in love with Texas. (meaning: they met in Texas and fell for each other, and also fell for Texas so they decided to live...

  3. Oct 2, 2012 · Whatever. If you insist, the variety the OP is after ("Anything remotely close to what Jesus spoke") is called "Judean Aramaic" by Sokoloff, i.e. what was spoken and written by Jews in Judea between the Maccabean and the Bar-Kokhbar revolts which includes the second temple period when Jesus lived.

  4. May 9, 2010 · 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. Being fond for someone though does not, in itself, imply love.

  5. Oct 18, 2014 · "I would love to" is a set phrase meaning "I really want to", but also seems like a conditional phrase when looked at grammatically. So I guessed that depending on what was implied in unspoken clause that preceded or followed it, the meaning of "I would love to" would change.

  6. Jan 5, 2016 · '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."

  7. Jul 3, 2018 · Hi. After 5 years of teaching and 9 years of studying I still think that the only difference between the two is that the one with would is more polite than the other. Please tell me if I'm right or wrong. PS: I have never fully understood the differences that the word "would" makes in English.

  8. Aug 21, 2014 · I suppose it can mean both love that is too much to bear, but in everyday use it's more likely to be love that's, well, overwhelming. Imagine that someone is in mourning or something like that, and the family rallies round the person in support and helps them a lot, the person in mourning could say they were overwhelmed by the amount of love they received, it was much more than what they were ...

  9. Dec 14, 2019 · In 2012 3OH!3 released a song titled “You’re gonna love this”. But shouldn’t it be “You will love this”? As far as I know both “will” and “going to” may be use in predictions, but „will” is a prediction based on the speaker’s knowledge or belief, and „going to” indicates a prediction based on something we can see, on outside evidence.

  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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