lovo you both
heart should be hearts
"We performers love correct grammar" is better!
No. In songs and in poems, sometimes improper grammar is used but it is understood to be used in a poetic way, not exactly a grammatically correct way. I think "love me do" is from a song.
It's correct to say 'you and her'. You and her sounds more personal and connected rather then "her and you" which sounds rather rude -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- In my opinion, no. Both are incorrect. The correct grammar would be "She and I" if the "you" was referring to yourself (eg She and I agree), or "you and she" if you were talking about another person to someone else (eg I saw Elsa with you the other day, you and she were going into the post office).
Both loves you and love you are grammatically correct. For example, "He loves you," or "We love you."
heart should be hearts
'Love treasures lost' is an incomplete thought, an incomplete sentence. You need a subject (noun or pronoun) and a clause...She loves finding treasures that werelost.
"We performers love correct grammar" is better!
No. In songs and in poems, sometimes improper grammar is used but it is understood to be used in a poetic way, not exactly a grammatically correct way. I think "love me do" is from a song.
It's correct to say 'you and her'. You and her sounds more personal and connected rather then "her and you" which sounds rather rude -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- In my opinion, no. Both are incorrect. The correct grammar would be "She and I" if the "you" was referring to yourself (eg She and I agree), or "you and she" if you were talking about another person to someone else (eg I saw Elsa with you the other day, you and she were going into the post office).
Both loves you and love you are grammatically correct. For example, "He loves you," or "We love you."
in the celebration of love of a life time
I love these couples (plural).I love this couple (singular).Therefore, if talking about a couple of friends, it would be, "I love this couple!" If talking about several couples (as on the dance floor, for instance) it would be, "I love these couple!"
Yes, "as are you" is correct grammar in certain contexts. It is commonly used in comparisons to indicate similarity or equality between two things or people. For example, "I love cats, as are you."
Almost, it should be "Mommy and Daddy love you."
The grammar is not correct. Me quieres mucho. You love me a lot.
The sentence "i loves you" is grammatically incorrect because the subject pronoun "I" should be followed by the verb "love" in its base form to match the first-person singular present tense. So, the correct sentence should be "I love you."