Both loves you and love you are grammatically correct.
For example, "He loves you," or "We love you."
The sentence "love you both with all my heart" is grammatically correct but is missing a subject. To improve clarity, it could be revised to "I love you both with all my heart." This addition makes it clear who is expressing the sentiment.
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.
"This is absolutely magnificent you love the family tree" is meaningless. It might perhaps be "It is magnificent that you love the family tree" which is grammatically correct. But is a very peculiar thing to call love of a family tree "magnificent" because a family tree is a list of parentage, never known ever to be "loved".
I love you
Almost, it should be "Mommy and Daddy love you."
No, not even close. What exactly are you trying to ask?
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."
no, I should be Holly and I
The sentence Let this promise remind you of his unfailing love is grammatically correct.
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.
The correct way form of this is "To love is to endure"
'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.
Yes, the sentence "I have been in love with him since childhood" is grammatically correct. It uses the present perfect tense to express an action that started in the past and continues into the present.
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.
"This is absolutely magnificent you love the family tree" is meaningless. It might perhaps be "It is magnificent that you love the family tree" which is grammatically correct. But is a very peculiar thing to call love of a family tree "magnificent" because a family tree is a list of parentage, never known ever to be "loved".
I love you
Yes. For example, All he needed was love from Tracy and you.