Picking flowers, do you love them or not, it NOT a phrase!
I love you too, babe is the correct phrase
This is not a sentence it is a phrase and as a phrase it is correct.
The phrase is: DOLCE FAR NIENTE
come to me. lets emabrase
The Welsh phrase for "Love from Grandad" is "Cariad oddi wrth Taid." In this phrase, "cariad" means "love," "oddi wrth" translates to "from," and "Taid" is a term for 'grandad' or 'grandfather' in Welsh.
The phrase 'my love' in Indonesian is: 'cintaku'.
I love you too, babe is the correct phrase
As long as you love me is a phrase commonly used. It is a phrase which means till the time you love me.
how would you explain the phrase:"love of country"
it means "come back to me my love, please"
John 15:13
Well basically it means " Good things always come back around" you do a good deed and good comes back to you.
The phrase isn't "veni, veni, veni". Instead it is the Latin phrase "veni, vidi, vici" which translated means "I came, I saw, I conquered". It is first attributed to Julius Caesar.
Translation: Come on, boyfriend/girlfriend.
There is no difference between the phrase loads of love and the phrase lots of love. They both have the meaning to give an enormous amount of love.
"min by love" is not a grammatical phrase.
This is not a sentence it is a phrase and as a phrase it is correct.