I love you
Both loves you and love you are grammatically correct. For example, "He loves you," or "We love you."
Almost, it should be "Mommy and Daddy love you."
The plural of the noun love is loves.
I love you too, babe is the correct phrase
Tottaly love for music.
Both loves you and love you are grammatically correct. For example, "He loves you," or "We love you."
A dreamer loves music.
'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.
Almost, it should be "Mommy and Daddy love you."
No it shouldn't be "loves" this is the incorrect tense. You should say: Nobody will love you more than I do.
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."
Harry loves Louis loves Harry loves Zayn loves Louis loves Niall love Liam loves Louis loves Zayn loves Niall loves Zayn loves Louis loves Liam loves Harry loves Niall love Louis Harry and Harry loves Louis
Both translations are correct, it depends on the context. If it is apparent you are talking about someone else, "She loves your life" is a good translation. If you are addressing someone, "Love your life" is relevant. If it is not clear, the latter translation is the best option, because you can translate "She loves your life" as "Lei amala tuavita", putting an emphasis on the fact that you are talking about someone else.
"He loves her, and she loves him, and he loves somebody else, you just can't win" from the song "Love Stinks"
I Love to Love - But My Baby Loves to Dance - was created in 1976.
If he is saying he loves you the way you love him, do you love him? If yes he loves, quite a lot. If no, he loves you but understands how you feel.
No. You'd need to add either a comma or an S to make it grammatically correct.Amy, love Roger.andAmy loves Roger.are both grammatically correct, though the first one seems a bit rude.