depends what you mean by never met
It isn't wrong so much as it is probably unrealistic. If you have talked, written and so on, then you kind of know how the other person thinks and how positive they are. But, love and ache? You need to spend time face to face to go that far--realistically. Otherwise, you may be attributing personal qualities to them that they actually do not have. Perfection is impossible except from afar.
If this is your first love, cherish the memories and the ache in your heart; write a poem about is. If this is your first love, cherish the memories and the ache in your heart; write a poem about it.
The spurned boy thought that the ache in his heart would never heal - it did, eventually!
i an suffering with a head ache top of head what could be caursing them
A side ache is caused by a lack of exercise and excess dehydration. If someone is out of shape they will experience pain in the abdomen, due to the ligaments by the liver and diaphragm pulling and not being done regularly. Also dehydration will cause a side ache.
Well. It depends on how bad you've fallen on it. Like I once fell down some stairs, and then sat in a tree for 4 hours and my prosterior did ache. So, it really depens on how bad youve hit it.
I have suffered from RA to some degree for most of my life and have never had a migraine head ache. come to think of it I have hardly ever had any sort of head ache.
The Ache are a South American native population of hunter-gatherers that has lived in eastern Paraguay since at least the first Jesuit missionary reports in the 1600s. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries the Ache apparently roamed much of the forest in eastern Paraguay between the Guaira waterfall on the upper Paraná River, to just north of the present-day city of Encarnación . Northern Ache, about 650 individuals; Yvytyruzu Ache, about 60 individuals; Ypety Ache, about 40 individuals; Ñacunday Ache, 28 individuals. A census in 1987 resulted in the following population count: Northern Ache, 459 individuals; Yvytyruzu Ache, 87 individuals; Ypety Ache 30 individuals; Ñacunday Ache, 38 individuals. Informant accounts indicate that the Northern Ache and the Yvytyruzu Ache were a single group until the early 1930s, when they split up and never saw each other again. The Ache language is classified in the Tupí-Guaraní Linguistic Family.
Ache (mistake, toothache)
You miss him. It's normal after a break up to miss someone.
Sounds like a flu, stomach ache, chills, and sore muscles are about right, not sure about the chest though, could be a chest cold.
It can be warning signs of Heart Problem or Chest infection.
The word ache has no homophones in the English language.