In French, you wouldn't "you are loved by me", but "I love you", which reads "Je vous aime" or "je t'aime" (the latter to somebody who is already your GF or BF)
aimé(e)
pour toujours aimé = always loved
Vous êtes aimé(e)
je t'ai aimé(e)
To say "I love him/her" in French, you say: "Je l'aime"
To say, I loved, it is "J'adore". Also, to say i loved it is je l'adore. Or just love(d) it is l'adore P.S most people would use the word aimer, not adorer so it would be j'aime instead of j'adore and so on, but adorer does work just as well
"Once Upon a Time I loved you" in French is "Il était une fois, je t'aimais."
well, im assuming you mean "i love you" (in present tense) which would be je t'aime.
pour aimer et être aimé / aimée
je t'aime depuis que je t'ai rencontré.
J'ai aimé français à l'école.
Aimé is a French equivalent for a 'loved' male'. Aimée is for a 'loved' female. They both are pronounced 'eh-meh'.