“So live I loveness, and my breast swells with bitterness, which nothing can assuage.”
“HIS loveness is more human than Goethe’s and songs are less passionate, but not less more perceptive and profound than intense or pathetic than Byron’s, and Yordsworth’s.”
“I feels such a loveness to Jesus, I could not sleep last night.”
“It’s just that one is the lover, while the other is the lovee. Together, they make love. One has an obligation to nurture, and the other has a duty of care.”
“One might even describe a monitored feedback loop that permits one to sense when insufficient loving is returning from the lovee, causing a lessening of the lover’s efforts.”
(usually transitive, sometimes intransitive) To have a strong affection for (someone or something). || (transitive) To need, thrive on. || (transitive, colloquial) To be strongly inclined towards something; an emphatic form of like. || (usually transitive, sometimes intransitive) To care deeply about, to be dedicated to (someone or something). || (transitive) To derive delight from a fact or situation.
“Of course, I would love having a coffee with you.”
“The locals love their ancestors, and their attachment to family land is almost visceral.”
“Paul kept saying that he was made to love her, and that she was made to love him. He then remarked that he couldn’t get enough of her, and asked if she could get enough of him.”