No. It may mean he is just insecure.
Go to search and type the same question in again....love you sweety
it means she wants you to answer her
The better question would be do you love yourself still? If you do then are you willing to possibly allow yourself to be hurt again by the same person. You have to love yourself before anyone else can love you.
Very interested in the answer you may give.
no! unless they change
You just asked a question. Do the same again....
No its not wrong to ask the same question over again. Maybe you want to see if different people have different answers. But it is very annoying to ask over and over again.
An "alternate" is another phrasing of the question, or the same question with spelling mistakes. These are "merged" into another question, so that if someone asks the question with one spelling or phrasing, they will be shown the main question and answer.
If the question asks whip is the person that Buddhism is named for, in the same manner as Christianity is named for Jesus the answer is simple - Buddhism is named for Siddhartha Gautama, a 6th century BCE Indian prince turned mendicant teacher known as the Buddha. If the question asks who has the same attributes as Jesus in Buddhism (son of god, protector, savior of mankind, forgiver of sins, etc.) then the answer is again simple - nobody, Buddhism does not have a god, salvation, divine intervention, etc.
Yes, You do! Everyone asks the same question and finds no answer. so yes you DO!
Yes they can, with the same person, again and again and again. Until you find that one special person you are fully in love with. its all part of growing up.
Question alternatives. When a user asks a question, another user may add alternative wordings to that question - if another user asks a question with the same wording as another question (or its alternatives), they will be redirected right to the already answered question. This helps askers get the information they want faster, and it helps answerers to answer different questions and provide their expertise elsewhere, using less time to answer the same question twice.