Look up the word love

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This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.

This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.


noun

a profoundly tender, passionate affection for another person.

a feeling of warm personal attachment or deep affection, as for a parent, child, or friend.

sexual passion or desire.

a person toward whom love is felt; beloved person; sweetheart.

(used as a term of endearment, affection, or the like): Would you like to see a movie, love?

Love, a personification of sexual affection, as Eros or Cupid.

affectionate concern for the well-being of others: the love of one’s neighbor.

strong predilection, enthusiasm, or liking for anything: her love of books.

the object or thing so liked: The theater was her great love.

the benevolent affection of God for His creatures, or the reverent affection due from them to God.

Chiefly Tennis. a score of zero; nothing.

a word formerly used in communications to represent the letter L.

verb (used with object), loved, lov·ing.

to have love or affection for: All her students love her.

to have a profoundly tender, passionate affection for (another person).

to have a strong liking for; take great pleasure in: to love music.

to need or require; benefit greatly from: Plants love sunlight.

to embrace and kiss (someone), as a lover.

to have sexual intercourse with.

verb (used without object), loved, lov·ing.

to have love or affection for another person; be in love.

Verb Phrases

love up, to hug and cuddle: She loves him up every chance she gets.

VIDEO FOR LOVE

QUIZ

CAN YOU ANSWER THESE COMMON GRAMMAR DEBATES?

There are grammar debates that never die; and the ones highlighted in the questions in this quiz are sure to rile everyone up once again. Do you know how to answer the questions that cause some of the greatest grammar debates?

Which sentence is correct?

Idioms about love

    for love,

    1. out of affection or liking; for pleasure.
    2. without compensation: He volunteered at the animal shelter for love.

    for the love of, in consideration of; for the sake of: For the love of mercy, stop that noise.

    in love, infused with or feeling deep affection or passion: a youth always in love.

    in love with, feeling deep affection or passion for (a person, idea, occupation, etc.); enamored of: in love with the girl next door;in love with one’s work.

    make love,

    1. to embrace and kiss as lovers.
    2. to engage in sexual activity.

    no love lost, dislike; animosity: There was no love lost between the two brothers.

Origin of love

First recorded before 900; Middle English noun love, louve, luve, Old English lufu, cognate with Old Frisian luve, Old High German luba, Gothic lubō; verb derived from the noun; akin to Latin lubēre (later libēre ) “to be pleasing,” Slavic (Polish ) lubić “to like, enjoy,” see also lief

OTHER WORDS FROM love

outlove, verb (used with object), out·loved, out·lov·ing.o·ver·love, verb, o·ver·loved, o·ver·lov·ing.

Words nearby love

Louÿs, lovable, lovage, lovastatin, lovat, love, loveable, love affair, love apple, love arrows, love at first sight

Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

MORE ABOUT LOVE

What is a basic definition of love?

Love is an intense, deep affection for another person. Love also means to feel this intense affection for someone. Love can also refer to a strong like for something or to like something a lot. Love has many other senses both as a verb and a noun.

It is difficult to explain what love is. Love is one of the most intense emotions humans feel in life. It is the opposite of hate, another incredibly intense emotion. When you would do anything for a specific person, that’s usually because you feel love for them.

There are many kinds of deep affection you can have for another person, and they can all be described as love. The love you feel for your parents won’t be the same love you feel for a close friend or a romantic partner. You can also have a strong emotional bond with an animal, such as your dog. That, too, is love.

  • Real-life examples: Spouses hopefully feel love toward each other. It is expected that a parent will have feelings of love for their child. Valentine’s Day is a celebration of love.
  • Used in a sentence: The man always helped his daughter out of love for her. 

Love is used in this same sense to mean to feel love toward another person. People who romantically love each other are said to be “in love” and are called lovers. These terms generally imply romantic or sexual attraction.

  • Real-life examples: Romeo loved Juliet. Most parents love their children. A person often loves their boyfriend or girlfriend.
  • Used in a sentence: She loves her best friend like a sister. 

Love is also used to refer to a less passionate, but still strong, fondness for something.

  • Real-life examples: Athletes have a love of sports. Readers have a love of books. Artists may have a love of painting, music, or drawing.
  • Used in a sentence: His love of Paris led him to take many trips to France. 

In this sense, love can also be used to mean to really like something or someone. The word lover is used to mean a person who really likes something, as in a “dog lover” or a “food lover.”

  • Real-life examples: Cats love to chase things. Outgoing people love being around other people. Couch potatoes love television.
  • Used in a sentence: I love going to the zoo and seeing all the animals. 

Where does love come from?

The first records of love come from before the 900s. The noun comes from the Old English word lufu, and the verb comes from the Old English lufian. Both of these words are related to older words for love, such as the Old Frisian luve and luvia.

Did you know … ?

How is love used in real life?

Love is a very common word that people use to refer to others that they cherish or to things they really like.

I love my sister so much she’s my best friend 💕💞💘💓💗

— LV (@_lovee_lupe) November 25, 2020

I like how my friends send me random cat memes because they know how much I love cats❤️

— please tell me to go study (@mutale019) November 25, 2020

“I sustain myself with the love of family.” #MayaAngelou

— Maya Angelou (@DrMayaAngelou) November 29, 2020

Try using love!

Which of the following words is NOT a synonym of love?

A. affection
B. infatuation
C. desire
D. hate

WHEN TO USE

What are other ways to say love?

The noun love refers to a profoundly tender, passionate affection for another person. When should you use love in place of affection or devotion? Find out on Thesaurus.com.

Words related to love

affection, appreciation, devotion, emotion, fondness, friendship, infatuation, lust, passion, respect, tenderness, yearning, lover, admire, care for, cherish, choose, go for, prefer, prize

How to use love in a sentence

  • Every now and again, we come across a love story that touches our hearts in more ways than be.

  • Again, I didn’t think much of it as a 15-year-old, but I just had a love for food.

  • Ideally you should be growing and evolving at similar rates and speeds for romantic love, I should say.

  • She’d met me in 1986, at a party for returned Peace Corps volunteers and had fallen in love with the guy who’d just spent two years teaching in Swaziland.

  • To be a real home cook, the kind who put love and attention into each dish, was to make everything yourself.

  • What happened to true love knows no boundaries and all that?

  • “I love my job and I love my city and I am committed to the work here,” he said in a statement.

  • And we have a lot of great guests this season: Greta Gerwig, Natasha Lyonne, Olivia Wilde, Steve Buscemi is back—I love that guy.

  • You just travel light with carry-on luggage, go to cities that you love, and get to hang out with all your friends.

  • Terrorism is bad news anywhere, but especially rough on Odessa, where the city motto seems to be “make love, not war.”

  • In this case, I suspect, there was co-operant a strongly marked childish characteristic, the love of producing an effect.

  • The well-known «cock and bull» stories of small children are inspired by this love of strong effect.

  • Women generally consider consequences in love, seldom in resentment.

  • And as she hesitated between obedience to one and duty toward the other, her life, her love and future was in the balance.

  • Nothing but an extreme love of truth could have hindered me from concealing this part of my story.

British Dictionary definitions for love


verb

(tr) to have a great attachment to and affection for

(tr) to have passionate desire, longing, and feelings for

(tr) to like or desire (to do something) very much

(tr) to make love to

(intr) to be in love

noun

  1. an intense emotion of affection, warmth, fondness, and regard towards a person or thing
  2. (as modifier)love song; love story

a deep feeling of sexual attraction and desire

wholehearted liking for or pleasure in something

Christianity

  1. God’s benevolent attitude towards man
  2. man’s attitude of reverent devotion towards God

Also: my love a beloved person: used esp as an endearment

British informal a term of address, esp but not necessarily for a person regarded as likable

(in tennis, squash, etc) a score of zero

fall in love to become in love

for love without payment

for love or money (used with a negative) in any circumstancesI wouldn’t eat a snail for love or money

for the love of for the sake of

in love in a state of strong emotional attachment and usually sexual attraction

make love

  1. to have sexual intercourse (with)
  2. archaic to engage in courtship (with)

Other words from love

Related adjective: amatory

Word Origin for love

Old English lufu; related to Old High German luba; compare also Latin libēre (originally lubēre) to please

Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition
© William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Other Idioms and Phrases with love


In addition to the idioms beginning with love

  • love affair
  • love at first sight

also see:

  • all’s fair in love and war
  • course of true love
  • fall in love
  • for the love of
  • labor of love
  • make love
  • misery loves company
  • no love lost
  • not for love or money
  • puppy love
  • somebody up there loves me

The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary
Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

Noun

Mr. Brown seems to imply that when he retired he relinquished her love as casually as he dispensed with her secretarial services.


Ken Follett, New York Times Book Review, 27 Dec. 1987


… Eddie sees Vince’s pure love of pool, and after years of thinking of the game as merely a hustle, the older man suddenly falls back in love with the game himself.


Maureen Dowd, New York Times Magazine, 28 Sept. 1986


Aunt Polly knelt down and prayed for Tom so touchingly, so appealingly, and with such measureless love in her words and her old trembling voice, that he was weltering in tears again, long before she was through.


Mark Twain, Tom Sawyer, 1876


Allworthy thus answered: » … I have always thought love the only foundation of happiness in a married state, as it can only produce that high and tender friendship which should always be the cement of this union … «


Henry Fielding, Tom Jones, 1749



Children need unconditional love from their parents.



He was just a lonely man looking for love.

Verb

People loved him for his brashness and talent, his crazy manglings of the English language, his brawling, boyish antics … and I loved him, too, I loved him as much as anyone in the world.


Paul Auster, Granta, Winter 1994


Lying awake, listening to the sound of his father’s breathing, he knew there was no one in the world he loved so much.


William Maxwell, New Yorker, 15 May 1989


I love either rushing off into abstractions, or shamelessly talking personalities.


Elizabeth Bowen, letter, 28 Apr. 1923


«Nay,» said Elizabeth, «this is not fair. You wish to think all the world respectable, and are hurt if I speak ill of any body. I only want to think you perfect, and you set yourself against it. Do not be afraid of my running into any excess, of my encroaching on your privilege of universal good will. You need not. There are few people whom I really love, and still fewer of whom I think well.»


Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice, 1813



She obviously loves her family very much.



You have to love in order to be loved.



He swore that he loved her madly.



She said she could never marry a man she didn’t love.

See More

Recent Examples on the Web



Gwen Stefani and Blake Shelton brought their love, talent and couple style to the 2023 CMT Music Awards.


Michelle Lee, Peoplemag, 2 Apr. 2023





Ardent young friendships—and young love—can cool.


Rachel Syme, The New Yorker, 1 Apr. 2023





In other words, these two love to see each other shining.


Naydeline Mejia, Women’s Health, 1 Apr. 2023





April 6, Holy Thursday On Holy Thursday, the Catholic Church celebrates charity, love, the institution of the Eucharist and the priestly order.


Nadia Cantú, The Arizona Republic, 31 Mar. 2023





Some of the most beautiful and fragrant roses love shade, sand, swampy soil, and even the coldest winters.


Benjamin Whitacre, Better Homes & Gardens, 31 Mar. 2023





May God continue to grant you peace, love, and happiness.


Country Living, 31 Mar. 2023





Watching his sister gig around Toronto, Kyn fell in love with every facet of the music-making process, from production to performance to promotion.


Beatrice Hazlehurst, Billboard, 31 Mar. 2023





Vivian Oparah and David Jonsson play a pair of 20-somethings who are both fresh off breakups and spend the day wandering through South London after a chance encounter — talking, falling in love, and generally being delightful.


James Grebey, Vulture, 31 Mar. 2023




The motions on this swing are unique and a big reason that some of our parenting experts have loved the MamaRoo.


Jessica Hartshorn, goodhousekeeping.com, 4 Apr. 2023





Thankfully, Amazon offers fast shipping options for those of us who love to procrastinate.


Josie Howell | Jhowell@al.com, al, 4 Apr. 2023





It Leatherology Belmont Tote in Canvas $150 at Leatherology Who doesn’t love a good monogram?


Lauren Hubbard, townandcountrymag.com, 4 Apr. 2023





Then there are the people who keep it on the counter and love soft butter.


Kristine M. Kierzek, Journal Sentinel, 3 Apr. 2023





The imaginary places Jackson most loved to visit were soap operas.


Hilton Als, The New Yorker, 3 Apr. 2023





Healy was a dedicated father who loved to spend time with his wife and daughters.


Ryan Collingwood, USA TODAY, 3 Apr. 2023





Sweet tea fans will love this spin on the mix of two classic summer sips.


Sharon Greenthal, Better Homes & Gardens, 3 Apr. 2023





Indiana tornadoes:How to help the victims of Indiana’s tornadoes Brett and Wendy Kincaid For more than 30 years together, Brett and Wendy Kincaid loved hard.


Kristine Phillips, The Indianapolis Star, 3 Apr. 2023



See More

These examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word ‘love.’ Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

  • loue (obsolete typography)

Pronunciation[edit]

  • enPR: lŭv, IPA(key): /lʌv/
    • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): [lʌv]
    • (General American) IPA(key): [ɫʌv]
    • (General Australian) IPA(key): [ɫäv~ɫɐv]
    • (India) IPA(key): [lɘʋ], [lɘv]
    • (Northern England, Ireland) IPA(key): /lʊv/
  • Rhymes: -ʌv

Etymology 1[edit]

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 love or 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 include Russian любовь (ljubovʹ), Polish lubić and Sanskrit लोभ (lobha, desire, greed).

Noun[edit]

Primates need love

love (countable and uncountable, plural loves)

  1. (uncountable) A deep caring for the existence of another.
  2. (uncountable) Strong affection.
    Antonyms: hate, hatred, angst, indifference
    1. A profound and caring affection towards someone.

      A mother’s love is not easily shaken.

      My husband’s love is the most important thing in my life.

      • 1674, John Milton, Paradise Lost:
        He on his side / Leaning half-raised, with looks of cordial love / Hung over her enamoured.
      • 2014, S. Hidden, Jewish, Christian, and Islamic Mystical Perspectives on the Love of God (→ISBN)
    2. Affectionate, benevolent concern or care for other people or beings, and for their well-being.
      • 1864, Utilitarianism Explained and Exemplified in Moral and Political Government:
        The love of your neighbor as yourself, is expressly given as the definition and test of Charity,—not alms-giving—and this love is […] the highest of all the Divine commands[.]
      • 1963, King, Jr., Martin Luther, “A Tough Mind and a Tender Heart”, in Strength to Love[1], New York: Pocket Books, published 1964, →OCLC, page 7:

        Through nonviolent resistance we shall be able to oppose the unjust system and at the same time love the perpetrators of the system. We must work passionately and unrelentingly for full stature as citizens, but may it never be said, my friends, that to gain it we used the inferior methods of falsehood, malice, hate, and violence.

    3. A feeling of intense attraction towards someone.

      I have never been in love as much as I have with you.

      • 1697, [William] Congreve, The Mourning Bride, a Tragedy. [], London: [] Jacob Tonson, [], →OCLC, Act III, page 39:

        Heav’n has no Rage, like Love to Hatred turn’d, / Nor Hell a Fury, like a Woman ſcorn’d.

      • 1897 December (indicated as 1898), Winston Churchill, chapter VIII, in The Celebrity: An Episode, New York, N.Y.: The Macmillan Company; London: Macmillan & Co., Ltd., →OCLC:

        The humor of my proposition appealed more strongly to Miss Trevor than I had looked for, and from that time forward she became her old self again; for, even after she had conquered her love for the Celebrity, the mortification of having been jilted by him remained.

    4. A deep or abiding liking for something; an enthusiasm for something.

      My love of cricket knows no bounds.

      • 2012, Philip Auerswald, The Coming Prosperity, →ISBN:

        For three decades, the average number of miles driven by US motorists increased steadily. Then, in 2007, that steady climb was suddenly halted. […] What magic caused Americans to temper their longstanding love of the open road?

  3. (countable) A person who is the object of romantic feelings; a darling, a sweetheart, a beloved.
    Synonyms: baby, darling, honey, lover, pet, sweetheart; see also Thesaurus:sweetheart
    • 1595, Edmund Spenser, Epithalamion

      Open the temple gates unto my love.

    • c. 1596–1598 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The Merchant of Venice”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies [] (First Folio), London: [] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act III, scene ii]:

      O love, dispatch all business, and be gone!

    • 1886 October – 1887 January, H[enry] Rider Haggard, She: A History of Adventure, London: Longmans, Green, and Co., published 1887, →OCLC:

      ‘Oh, my love, my love!’ she murmured, ‘wilt thou ever know how I have loved thee?’ and she kissed him on the forehead, and then went and stood in the pathway of the flame of Life.

    • 1969, The Dubliners, Dirty Old Town:

      I met my love by the gasworks wall.

  4. (colloquial, Commonwealth) A term of friendly address, regardless of feelings.
    Synonyms: mate, darling, lovey, sweetie, sweetheart

    Hello love, how can I help you?

  5. A thing, activity, etc. which is the object of one’s deep liking or enthusiasm.
    • 1997 March, «Faces of Today’s Black Woman», in Ebony, volume 52, number 5, page 96:
      But it wasn’t until [Theresa M. Claiborne] went to ROTC training camp at the University of California at Berkeley that she discovered that flying was her first love. «Pilots talk about getting bit by the flying bug,» she says. «I thought, This is heaven.»
  6. (euphemistic) Sexual desire; attachment based on sexual attraction.
    Synonyms: aphrodisia, carnality; see also Thesaurus:lust
    • 2013, Ronald Long, Men, Homosexuality, and the Gods, Routledge, →ISBN, page 3:

      The prospect that their cherished Greeks would have countenanced, much less honored, a love between men that expressed itself carnally, however, was not so easily assimilated.

  7. (euphemistic) Sexual activity.
    Synonyms: lovemaking, sex; see also Thesaurus:copulation
    • 1986, Ben Elton & al., Blackadder II, «Bells»:
      —What think you, my lord, of… love?
      —You mean ‘rumpy-pumpy’.
  8. An instance or episode of being in love; a love affair.
    Synonym: romance
    • 2014, E. L. Todd, Then Came Absolution, →ISBN:

      Maybe it was just a summer love, something with no future.

  9. Used as the closing, before the signature, of a letter, especially between good friends or family members, or by the young.
  10. Alternative letter-case form of Love (personification of love).
    • c. 1810,, Samuel Johnson (in The Works of Samuel Johnson):
      At busy hearts in vain love’s arrows fly; […]
  11. (obsolete) A thin silk material.
    • 1664, Robert Boyle, Experiments and Considerations Touching Colours, []
      Such a kind of transparency, as that of a Sive, a piece of Cyprus, or a Love-Hood.
  12. A climbing plant, Clematis vitalba.
Translations[edit]

Verb[edit]

love (third-person singular simple present loves, present participle loving, simple past and past participle loved)

  1. (usually transitive, sometimes intransitive, stative) To have a strong affection for (someone or something).
    • 1918 September–November, Edgar Rice Burroughs, “The Land That Time Forgot”, in The Blue Book Magazine, Chicago, Ill.: Story-press Corp., →OCLC; republished as chapter VI, in Hugo Gernsback, editor, Amazing Stories, volume 1, New York, N.Y.: Experimenter Publishing, 1927, →OCLC:

      wanted to take her in my arms and tell her how I loved her, and had taken her hand from the rail and started to draw her toward me when Olson came blundering up on deck with his bedding.

    • 2013 February 26, Pink and Nate Ruess, Just Give Me a Reason:
      Just give me a reason, / just a little bit’s enough, / just a second we’re not broken, just bent / and we can learn to love again.

    I love my spouse.   I love you!   I love that song!

  2. (transitive) To need, thrive on.

    Mold loves moist, dark places.

  3. (transitive) To be strongly inclined towards something; an emphatic form of like.

    I love walking barefoot on wet grass;  I’d love to join the team;  I love what you’ve done with your hair

  4. (usually transitive, sometimes intransitive) To care deeply about, to be dedicated to (someone or something).
    • John 3:16
      For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.
    • Matthew: 22:37-38
      You shall love the Lord your God with your whole heart, and your whole mind, and your whole soul; you shall love your neighbor as yourself.
    • 2013 June 21, Oliver Burkeman, “The tao of tech”, in The Guardian Weekly, volume 189, number 2, page 27:

      The dirty secret of the internet is that all this distraction and interruption is immensely profitable. Web companies like to boast about [] offering services that let you [] «share the things you love with the world» and so on. But the real way to build a successful online business is to be better than your rivals at undermining people’s control of their own attention.

  5. (transitive) To derive delight from a fact or situation.

    I love the fact that the coffee shop now offers fat-free chai latte.

  6. (transitive, euphemistic) To have sex with (perhaps from make love).

    I wish I could love her all night long.

Conjugation[edit]
Synonyms[edit]
  • (have a strong affection for): adore, cherish; see also Thesaurus:love
  • (have sexual intercourse with): enjoy, go to bed with, sleep with; see also Thesaurus:copulate with
Antonyms[edit]
  • hate, despise, fear
Derived terms[edit]
  • all’s fair in love and war
  • cupboard love
  • fall in love
  • first love
  • I love you
  • in love
  • lady love
  • love affair
  • love at first sight
  • love bird, lovebird
  • love bite, lovebite
  • love bomb
  • love bug
  • love child
  • love cycle
  • love egg
  • love feast
  • love game
  • love goggles
  • love grass
  • love handle
  • love interest
  • love is blind
  • love language
  • love life
  • love match
  • love nest
  • love on
  • love polygon
  • love potion
  • love rat
  • love rose
  • love seat
  • love song
  • love story
  • love tap
  • love toy
  • love triangle
  • love-hate
  • love-in
  • love-in-a-mist
  • love-making
  • love-shyness
  • lovebunny
  • loved-up
  • loveday
  • loveless
  • lovely
  • lover
  • lovertine
  • loveship
  • lovesick
  • lovesome
  • lovestone
  • loveworthy
  • lovey-dovey
  • loving kindness
  • loyal love
  • make love
  • no love lost
  • platonic love
  • puppy love
  • tough love
  • true love
  • unrequited love
  • zouk love
[edit]
  • lov
  • luv
  • wuv
Translations[edit]

See also[edit]

  • charity

Etymology 2[edit]

Now widely believed (due to historical written record) to be from the idea that when one does a thing “for love”, that is for no monetary gain, the word “love” implying «nothing».

The former assumption that it had originated from French l’œuf (literally the egg), due to its shape, has largely been discredited and is no longer widely accepted.

Needless to say, the apparent similarity of the shape of an egg to a zero has inspired similar analogies, such as the use of duck (reputed to be short for duck’s egg) for a zero score at cricket, and goose egg for «zero».

Noun[edit]

love (uncountable)

  1. (racquet sports, billiards) Zero, no score.
    So that’s fifteen-love to Kournikova.
    • 2013, Paul McNamee, Game Changer: My Tennis Life
      The next day Agassi came back from two sets to love down to beat Courier in five sets.
  2. Nothing; no recompense.
    • 1916, H. Rider Haggard, The Ivory Child
      I fought the white man for less than sixpence. I fought him for love, which is nothing at all.
Translations[edit]

zero

  • Albanian: zero (sq)
  • Catalan: res (ca), zero (ca) m
  • Danish: nul (da)
  • Dutch: nul (nl)
  • Esperanto: nulo (eo)
  • Finnish: nolla (fi)
  • French: zéro (fr)
  • German: null (de)
  • Hebrew: אפס (he) m (éfes)
  • Hungarian: null (hu), semmi (hu)
  • Italian: zero (it)
  • Japanese: ラブ (ja) (rabu), 零点 (ja) (reiten)
  • Latin: nulli
  • Macedonian: нула (mk) f (nula)
  • Norwegian: null (no)
  • Polish: zero (pl), jajo (pl)
  • Portuguese: zero (pt)
  • Russian: ноль (ru) m (nolʹ)
  • Scottish Gaelic: neoni
  • Serbo-Croatian:
    Cyrillic: ну̏ла f
    Latin: nȕla (sh) f
  • Slovak: nula (sk) f
  • Spanish: cero (es), nada (es)
  • Swedish: noll (sv)
  • Tagalog: wala (tl)
  • Tamil: காதல் (ta) (kātal), அன்பு (ta) (aṉpu)
  • Vietnamese: không (vi)
  • West Frisian: nul (fy)

Etymology 3[edit]

Verb[edit]

love (third-person singular simple present loves, present participle loving, simple past and past participle loved)

  1. Alternative form of lofe (to praise, sell)

References[edit]

  • love at OneLook Dictionary Search
  • love in Keywords for Today: A 21st Century Vocabulary, edited by The Keywords Project, Colin MacCabe, Holly Yanacek, 2018.
  • “love”, in The Century Dictionary [], New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911, →OCLC.

Anagrams[edit]

  • levo, levo-, velo-, vole, voël

Czech[edit]

Pronunciation[edit]

  • IPA(key): [ˈlovɛ]
  • Hyphenation: lo‧ve

Etymology 1[edit]

Borrowed from Romani love.

Noun[edit]

love f pl

  1. (slang) money
    Synonym: prachy
Declension[edit]
  • Indeclinable.

Etymology 2[edit]

See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.

Noun[edit]

love m

  1. vocative singular of lov

Further reading[edit]

  • love in Kartotéka Novočeského lexikálního archivu

Danish[edit]

Pronunciation[edit]

  • IPA(key): /ˈlɔːvə/, [ˈlɔːʋə], [ˈlɔːʊ]

Etymology 1[edit]

From Middle Low German lōve, from Proto-Germanic *galaubô, cognate with German Glaube.

Noun[edit]

love c

  1. (obsolete) trust, faith
    only in the phrase på tro og love (solemnly)

References[edit]

  • “love,1” in Den Danske Ordbog

Etymology 2[edit]

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[edit]

love (past tense lovede, past participle lovet)

  1. to promise
  2. (solemn) to praise
Conjugation[edit]

References[edit]

  • “love,2” in Den Danske Ordbog
  • “love,3” in Den Danske Ordbog

Etymology 3[edit]

See See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.

Noun[edit]

love c

  1. indefinite plural of lov

Dutch[edit]

Pronunciation[edit]

Verb[edit]

love

  1. (archaic) singular present subjunctive of loven

Anagrams[edit]

  • velo, voel

French[edit]

Pronunciation[edit]

Verb[edit]

love

  1. inflection of lover:
    1. first-person /third-person singular present indicative/subjunctive
    2. second-person singular imperative

Anagrams[edit]

  • vélo, vole, volé

Friulian[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From Latin lupa, feminine of lupus. Compare Venetian lova, French louve.

Pronunciation[edit]

This entry needs pronunciation information. If you are familiar with the IPA then please add some!

Noun[edit]

love f (plural lovis)

  1. she-wolf

[edit]

  • lôf

Hunsrik[edit]

Pronunciation[edit]

  • IPA(key): /ˈloːvə/

Verb[edit]

love

  1. to praise

Further reading[edit]

  • Online Hunsrik Dictionary

Inari Sami[edit]

Inari Sami numbers (edit)

100
 ←  1  ←  9 10 11  →  20  → 
1
    Cardinal: love
    Ordinal: lovváád

Etymology[edit]

From Proto-Samic *lokē

Numeral[edit]

love

  1. ten

Inflection[edit]

This numeral needs an inflection-table template.

Further reading[edit]

  • love in Marja-Liisa Olthuis, Taarna Valtonen, Miina Seurujärvi and Trond Trosterud (2015–2022) Nettidigisäänih Anarâškiela-suomakielâ-anarâškielâ sänikirje[2], Tromsø: UiT
  • Koponen, Eino; Ruppel, Klaas; Aapala, Kirsti, editors (2002–2008) Álgu database: Etymological database of the Saami languages[3], Helsinki: Research Institute for the Languages of Finland

Middle Dutch[edit]

Noun[edit]

lōve

  1. dative singular of lof

Middle English[edit]

Etymology 1[edit]


Inherited from Old English lufu, from Proto-West Germanic *lubu, from Proto-Germanic *lubō.

Alternative forms[edit]

  • lof, lofe, louf, luf, lufe, luff, luffe, luve
  • leove, lofve, lufæ (early)

Pronunciation[edit]

  • IPA(key): /ˈluv(ə)/, /ˈloːv(ə)/

Noun[edit]

love (plural loves)

  1. Love; strong and deep affection:
    1. Sexual or romantic desire (in humans and animals)
    2. Theosis, sanctification, or love as a means to attain it.
  2. One who one loves; a loved individual:
    1. A lover; a sexual or romantic partner.
    2. A personification or embodiment of love.
    3. (Christianity) The Holy Spirit (or less often, God generally).
  3. A peace treaty; the ending of hostilities.
  4. (rare) Permission, consent.
[edit]
  • lovable
  • loveache
  • loveday
  • loveles
  • lovely
  • loven
  • lovere
  • loverede
  • lovesom
  • lovynge
Descendants[edit]
  • English: love
  • Scots: luve, lufe
  • Yola: loove

References[edit]

  • “lǒve, n.(1).”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.

Etymology 2[edit]


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.

Alternative forms[edit]

  • lave, leve, loove
  • lafe, læve, loave (early)

Pronunciation[edit]

  • IPA(key): /ˈlɔːv(ə)/
  • (Northern) IPA(key): /laːf/, /ˈlaːv(ə)/

Noun[edit]

love (uncountable)

  1. The remainder or rest; that which is left.
    • c. 1375, “Book VI”, in Iohne Barbour, De geſtis bellis et uirtutibus domini Roberti de Brwyß [] (The Brus, Advocates MS. 19.2.2)‎[4], Ouchtirmunſye: Iohannes Ramſay, published 1489, folio 21, recto, lines 431-434; republished at Edinburgh: National Library of Scotland, c. 2010:

      Thyꝛwall þ[at] was þ[air] capitain / Wes þ[air] in þe baꝛgain slain / ⁊ off his men þe maſt p[ar]ty / Ϸe laue fled full affrayitly

      Thirlwall, who was their commander / was killed there in the struggle / with the greatest part of his men; / the rest fled very frightened.
  2. (rare) A widow; a woman whose husband has died.
    Synonyms: relicte, widwe
Descendants[edit]
  • English: lave
  • Scots: lave

References[edit]

  • “lōve, n.(2).”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.

Etymology 3[edit]


Borrowed from Old Norse lófi, from Proto-Germanic *lōfô; compare glove.

Alternative forms[edit]

  • lof, loove, louf, luf, lufe, luff, luffe

Pronunciation[edit]

  • IPA(key): /ˈloːv(ə)/, /loːf/

Noun[edit]

love (plural loves)

  1. (chiefly Northern) The palm (inner part of the hand)
Descendants[edit]
  • English: loof
  • Scots: luif, lufe, luff

References[edit]

  • “lọ̄ve, n.(3).”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.

Etymology 4[edit]

Verb[edit]

love

  1. Alternative form of loven (to love)

Etymology 5[edit]

Verb[edit]

love

  1. Alternative form of loven (to praise)

Norwegian Bokmål[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From Old Norse lofa.

Verb[edit]

love (imperative lov, present tense lover, simple past and past participle lova or lovet, present participle lovende)

  1. to praise

Verb[edit]

love (imperative lov, present tense lover, simple past lova or lovet or lovte or lovde, past participle lova or lovet or lovt or lovd, present participle lovende)

  1. to promise
    (as an adjective) det lovede land — the Promised Land

[edit]

  • løfte

References[edit]

  • “love” in The Bokmål Dictionary.

Norwegian Nynorsk[edit]

Verb[edit]

love (present tense lovar or lover, past tense lova or lovde, past participle lova or lovt or lovd, present participle lovande, imperative lov)

  1. Alternative form of lova

Noun[edit]

love m (definite singular loven, indefinite plural lovar, definite plural lovane)

  1. Alternative form of lóve

Anagrams[edit]

  • vole

Romani[edit]

Noun[edit]

love

  1. plural of lovo
  2. money

Descendants[edit]

  • French: lové
  • Hungarian: lóvé
  • Romanian: lovea
  • Russian: лавэ́ (lavɛ́)
  • Scots: lowie
  • Serbo-Croatian:
    • Cyrillic script: ло́ва
    • Latin script: lóva
  • Slovak: lóve

Serbo-Croatian[edit]

Noun[edit]

love (Cyrillic spelling лове)

  1. vocative singular of lov

Verb[edit]

love (Cyrillic spelling лове)

  1. third-person plural present of loviti


На основании Вашего запроса эти примеры могут содержать грубую лексику.


На основании Вашего запроса эти примеры могут содержать разговорную лексику.

поискать слово

искать слово

найти слово

посмотрите слово

Смотреть значение слова


I can look up the word «intercrural».


I have to look up the word «innuendo,» if you know what I mean.



Надо поискать слово «инсинуация», если понимаете, о чем я.


It’s a tearjerker, if not just for the moment when Kabir overhears his parents’ meeting with an immigration official and has to look up the word «deportation» in his dictionary.



Это слезоточивый человек, если не только в тот момент, когда Кабир подслушивает встречу своих родителей с сотрудником иммиграционной службы и вынужден искать слово «депортация» в своем словаре.


«But how does he know where and how he is to look up the word ‘red’ and what he is to do with the world ‘five’?»



Но как же он знает, где и как ему искать слово «красный» и что он должен делать со словом «пять»?


You should really look up the word «boring» in a dictionary.


For example, if you were to look up the word «beautiful,» you might get a listing of more than thirty words that have similar meanings.



Например, если вы ищите слово «прекрасный», вы можете получить список из более чем тридцати слов, имеющих сходное значение.


And the first thing I planned to do when I got home was to look up the word «feminist» in the dictionary.



И я пообещала себе сразу, как только вернусь домой, посмотреть в словаре слово «феминистка».


Note to self, look up the word «semantics.»


I would love all of you to look up the word kenosis.


In this case, the definition of feminism was itself the subject of the news story-an invitation for many people to look up the word.



В этом случае определение феминизма само по себе было предметом новостей — оно стало поводом для многих людей поискать это слово.


Please look up the word «dignity.»


Perhaps you should look up the word ‘Boycott’.


I had to look up the word Addlepated.


If you look up the word «frustration» in the dictionary, you’ll probably see a picture of a Rubik’s Cube.



Если поискать в словаре слово «отчаяние», скорее всего, вы увидите изображение кубика Рубика.


And the first thing I planned to do when I got home was to look up the word «feminist» in the dictionary.



Первое, что я запланировала сделать, придя домой, — посмотреть слово «феминистка» в словаре.


If you look up the word in the dictionary, you will find definitions including



Если вы заглянете в словарь, то найдете там следующее определение


So my rich dad had me look up the word: «fiat.»



И тогда мой богатый папа показал мне слово «наречение»


Please look up the word HERESY.


So my rich dad had me look up the word: «fiat.»


Could you look up the word «narf» for me?

Ничего не найдено для этого значения.

Результатов: 48. Точных совпадений: 48. Затраченное время: 95 мс

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Индекс выражения: 1-400, 401-800, 801-1200

Индекс фразы: 1-400, 401-800, 801-1200

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