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2023年6月24日 · 最 愛 する • (saiai suru) suru (stem 最 (さい) 愛 (あい) し (), past 最 (さい) 愛 あい) した (saiai shita)) to be beloved, to be close, to be dear Conjugation [edit] Conjugation of "最愛する" (See Appendix:Japanese verbs.) Katsuyōkei ("stem forms") Mizenkei ...
2022年6月25日 · Chinese [ edit] For pronunciation and definitions of 第 四 爱 – see 第四愛 (“ heterosexual relationship where the woman is the top ”). ( This term is the simplified form of 第四愛 ). Categories: zh:Love. zh:Gender. Chinese lemmas. Mandarin lemmas. Chinese nouns.
2024年4月28日 · I love you. An affirmation of affection or deep caring, especially to a family member . "I love you, Mom," said Candace. An affirmation of romantic feeling to a lover or spouse. "I love you, Camille," said Dan. A platonic expression of strong inclination or liking to a friend. I love you, man, but you need some professional help.
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Alternative forms
1. loue (obsolete typography) 2. luv
Pronunciation
1. enPR: lŭv, IPA(key): /lʌv/ 1.1. (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): [lʌv] 1.2. (General American) IPA(key): [ɫʌv] 1.3. (General Australian) IPA(key): [ɫäv~ɫɐv] 1.4. (India) IPA(key): [lɘʋ], [lɘv] 1.5. (Northern England, Ireland) IPA(key): /lʊv/ 2. Rhymes: -ʌv
Etymology 1
From Middle English love, luve, from Old English lufu, from Proto-West Germanic *lubu, from Proto-Germanic *lubō, from Proto-Indo-European *lewbʰ- (“love, care, desire”). The close of a letter sense is presumably a truncation of With loveor the like. The verb is from Middle English loven, luvien, from Old English lufian (“to love”), from Proto-West Germanic *lubōn (“to love”), derived from the noun. Eclipsed non-native English amour (“love”), borrowed from French amour (“love”). Cognates incl...
Pronunciation
1. IPA(key): [ˈlovɛ] 2. Hyphenation: lo‧ve
Etymology 1
Borrowed from Romani love.
Etymology 2
See the etymology of the corresponding lemmaform.
Pronunciation
1. IPA(key): /ˈlɔːvə/, [ˈlɔːʋə], [ˈlɔːʊ]
Etymology 1
From Middle Low German lōve, from Proto-Germanic *galaubô, cognate with German Glaube.
Etymology 2
From Old Norse lofa, from Proto-Germanic *(ga)lubōną, cognate with Swedish lova (“to promise; to praise”), German loben (“to praise”), geloben (“to vow”), Dutch loven (“to praise”).
Verb
love 1. (dated or formal) singular present subjunctive of loven
Anagrams
1. velo, voel
Verb
love 1. inflection of lover: 1.1. first-person /third-person singular present indicative/subjunctive 1.2. second-person singular imperative
Anagrams
1. vélo, vole, volé
Etymology
From Latin lupa, feminine of lupus. Compare Venetian lova, French louve.
Noun
love f (plural lovis) 1. she-wolf
Etymology
Inherited from Middle High German loben, from Old High German lobōn, from Proto-West Germanic *lobōn, from Proto-Germanic *lubōną. Cognate with German loben, Luxembourgish luewen.
Pronunciation
1. IPA(key): /ˈloːvə/ 2. Rhymes: -oːvə 3. Hyphenation: lo‧ve
Verb
love 1. (transitive) to praise [+accusative] 1.1. Sie hon en fiel gelobd. 1.1.1. They praisedhim a lot.
Etymology 1
Inherited from Old English lufu, from Proto-West Germanic *lubu, from Proto-Germanic *lubō.
Etymology 2
Inherited from Old English lāfe, oblique singular of lāf, from Proto-West Germanic *laibu, from Proto-Germanic *laibō; compare leven (“to halt”), which some forms are influenced by.
Etymology 3
Borrowed from Old Norse lófi, from Proto-Germanic *lōfô; compare glove.
2024年3月31日 · Particle denoting agreement, support or wish to terminate a conversation. Particle denoting dissatisfaction in ironical sentences. ( Hokkien) Particle denoting that the listener is still listening or is still interested with what the speaker is saying. ( backchanneling) such; what. 好 一 朵 美麗 的 茉莉花 。.
2024年4月21日 · Pictogram () : a woman with breasts kneeling or standing.In modern form turned on left side: enclosed area is remnant of left breast (character's left, depicted woman's right), while right breast has disappeared. Graphically cognate to 母 (mǔ, “mother”), which has developed similarly, but also includes dots for nipples and has retained both breasts.
2024年5月9日 · Still, the movie [Ralph Breaks the Internet] manages to locate some gentle satire in our culture's love-hate relationship with the internet.At one point, Ralph must attain a certain level of viral popularity, assisted by the BuzzFeed-esque content guru Yesss (Taraji P. Henson), and the movie is savvy about how accidental spikes in fame can turn into cynical algorithm manipulation.