Sweetie, sweetheart, mutual crush, boy/girlfriend, dating, "in like," superhero, beau, involved, together. It depends on what exactly you're trying to convey and to whom.
You call them someone you have feelings for, but until you tell them how you fell your gonna stay freinds
Lovers maybe?
remarket is nothing more than to resale
The word 'plural' is an adjective used to describe a noun as more than one.The word 'plural' is a noun as word for a part of speech; a noun for more than one person, place, or thing.
One word that could be used to describe a female that begins with "k" is kind'. However, women are much more than a word of group of words.
You could be looking for "cronyism" or "nepotism". The latter is more likely to be used for relatives rather than friends.
You could use term, which however can be more than one word.You can also describe the word in question such as "noun", "verb", "preposition", etc.
Any abstract notion like love, hatred, happiness or misery takes more than one word to describe it.
Affable
Yes. Nothing gave her more pleasure than having a good meal with her friends.
John 15:13, 14 - Greater love has no one than this, than to lay down one's life for his friends. You are My friends if you do whatever I command you. [NKJV]Jesus Called his disciples friends he wasn't only referring to the twelve disciples to those that hear and do the word of God as he said in Luke 8:21 "my mother and my brothers are those who hear the word of God and do it" a brother is more than a friend. A brother knows more of his other brother than a friend and have the same father as the other.
agradable and amistoso, respectively. In Spanish, there is more than one word to describe both of these words...it depens on the context which word is most appropriate.
Plenty refers to much more than one of something. It is already plural in a sense. The word can not be used to describe singularly.
a rectangle is no more than a parallelogram with 90 degree angles, or you could call it simply a quadrilateral