Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. 23 de jun. de 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.

  2. 30 de set. de 2011 · "My love d ones" - if you have more than one - maybe your family, or some very dear friends ...

  3. 5 de jun. de 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.

  4. 16 de ago. de 2014 · Aug 16, 2014. #2. It depends on the context - can you give examples of the context you're thinking of? You could say "I'm better than you are, because I love the most" (eg. I have more love to give than you do). Or with an object, you could say "I love the most wonder man in the world", which is completely different.

  5. 5 de jan. de 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."

  6. 10 de mar. de 2019 · Tamil. Mar 10, 2019. #6. snowflower said: Is it used when it means the mother loves her daughter more than she loves anyone else? Both could be used to express this idea. Thinking more about it, I suppose "I love you most" could also mean "I love you more than anyone else does" but I think "the" is likely to be used here.

  7. 30 de jan. de 2007 · My teacher says it simply means “I love it at the moment, and my state [loving it] hasn't stopped/finished”, like “I'm watching TV=I'm watching TV at the present and my action [watching TV] hasn't stopped/finished”. My friend says it means “When you are having a meal in McDonald and finds that the food is tasty, you want to show ...

  8. 24 de nov. de 2020 · Nov 24, 2020. #4. Remember this is a song, and songs don't need to follow 'normal' meanings, or 'normal' 'rules' or grammar. I don't know the song, but I assume he needed a single syllable word there to fit the tune, and so he went for 'up'. He may have briefly considered 'passed' but then it would have weakened "All things must pass, All ...

  9. 27 de dez. de 2011 · English (British) Dec 27, 2011. #2. Both are "correct" grammatically, but have slightly different meanings in some contexts. "I love to cook" means that the speaker enjoys being involved in actually preparing food. "I love cooking" would generally mean the same, but it could be used to indicate their interest in the subject, but not necessarily ...

  10. 21 de nov. de 2006 · Nov 21, 2006. #3. Visceral is indeed used in English to describe something felt deeply, in the gut, but I have trouble associating it with a warm and positive feeling. I actually used the phrase "visceral reaction" recently when I went to visit a friend in the hospital - I had a visceral reaction to the smells of disinfectant and something else ...

  1. As pessoas também buscaram por