Sentences with love
love
L l - Oh, Amy, I love you. [VERB noun]
- Our love for each other has been increased by what we've been through together. [+ for]
- Children need unconditional love from their parents.
- The simplest of love stories can be remarkably complicated.
- You'll never love anyone the way you love your baby. [VERB noun]
- My love for all my children is unconditional. [+ for]
- He lost his ambition and forgot everything but his love for this unworthy woman.
- That year he moved to London but his love for Wales was strong and he eventually settled permanently there.
- We loved the food so much, especially the fish dishes. [VERB noun/verb-ing]
- I love my country as you love yours. [VERB noun]
- And these days he loves nothing more than combining his love of running with his passion for travel.
- You'll need to read this book to taste his love of the hurley, the alley and hurling itself.
- This is no way to encourage a love of literature.
- 'She is the love of my life,' he said.
- Is it a story about love for your family, love for your country, a revolution.
- My brother, and his real, strong love for me that was able to pull me back into the world I know.
- I would love to play for England again. [VERB to-infinitive]
- He beat Thomas Muster of Austria three sets to love.
- Finding love is a hard thing to do, but don't fret.
- To come back from two sets to love and win it is an awesome feeling.
- ...with love from Grandma and Grandpa.
- Please give her my love.
- Though her appreciation and love for music never subsided, Jen did not actively compose again for several years.
- He unexpectedly finds himself falling in love with a young refugee.
- love song
- Give Mary my love
- But the biggest thing in Amanda's life was children, her incredible love for them and devotion to them.
- After that I'd get out and do lots of gardening; I love gardening.
- A love of music
- To love books
- Making a girl fall in love with you is easier than you think.
- Love implies intense fondness or deep devotion and may apply to various relationships or objects [sexual love, brotherly love, love of one's work, etc.]; affection suggests warm, tender feelings, usually not as powerful or deep as those implied by , love [he has no affection for children]; attachment implies connection by ties of affection, attraction, devotion, etc. and may be felt for inanimate things as well as for people [an attachment to an old hat]; infatuation implies a foolish or unreasoning passion or affection, often a transient one [an elderly man's infatuation for a young girl]
- A plant that loves shade
- He took care of the poor for love.
- For the love of mercy, stop that noise.
- A youth always in love.
- In love with the girl next door; in love with one's work.
- There was no love lost between the two brothers.
- Would you like to see a movie, love?
- The love of one's neighbor.
- Her love of books.
- The theater was her great love.
- All her pupils love her.
- To love music.
- Plants love sunlight.