Ambivalent or Bittersweet. For those of us living in the upper midwest, I would add the word-"November".
Ambivalence is a word for having two feelings at the same time.
Feelings.
ambivalence.
In the sense of having hurt feelings, 'mad'.
Having two wives at one time is "bigamy" (illegal in the US, but common in some societies). The general word for having more than one wife is polygamy.
The answer is feelings because ambi- means both and when you are ambivalent then you are having mixed feelings for someone or something.
The denotation of a word refers to its literal meaning, while the connotation refers to the associated feelings or ideas that the word evokes.
Those letters spell the word feelings.
A word having the same or nearly the same meaning as another.
To answer this, explanation is needed. Which "like"? Like as in having affectionate feelings to something, Like as in a simile?
The the word 'ambivalent' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun as having mixed feelings or contradictory feelings or ideas about something or someone.Example: She was ambivalent about where she wanted to eat.
They are said to be congruent
The word 'ambivalent' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun as having mixed feelings or contradictory feelings or ideas about something or someoneExample: She was ambivalent about where she wanted to eat.Note: The adjective 'ambivalent' is functioning as a subject complement following the linking verb 'was' (she=ambivalent).