"I yearn to return to my one true love"
To yearn means to long for. It is somewhat poetic and a word you might find in a romantic novel, but not a word you will hear often in everyday speech.
She watched the waves crash on the shore, feeling a deep yearning for the sea. His eyes were filled with yearn as he spoke of his dreams of traveling the world. The old man sat on the park bench, yearning for the days when his wife was still by his side.
She yearns for the love that got away.
"Yearn" in Tagalog can be translated as "hangarin" or "pagnanasa."
The past tense of "yearn" is "yearned."
In Igbo, the word "yearn" can be translated as "anα» n'α»₯zα»." It conveys the sense of longing or desiring something strongly, usually with an emotional or deep-felt longing.
One homophone for "year" is "ear."
Sentences that end in a period are called declarative sentences. These sentences make a statement or express an opinion.
of Yearn
How I yearn to find an answer to this question (search google for "How I yearn")
yearn = hitga'age'a (התגעגע)
I yearn for ice cram spilt
Yes, "to yearn" is a verb because it is an action.
To pine means yearn for something.
Many immigrants merely yearn to breathe free. The wool shopper said she should yearn for sturdier yarn.
The word yearn is a regular verb. The past tense is yearned.
I yearn to see my childhood home; I have not been back there in many years and I miss it. (To yearn is to have a deep longing, to really miss something or someone.)
The synonym for the verb to long for is to yearn. Example sentence: They yearn for the green hills of home.
"Most teenagers yearn for the day when they can make all their own decisions." "On my long Navy cruises, I yearn for pizza from the restaurant near my house."
Desire is another word for yearn. Additional synonyms include covet, hanker, pine and crave.