"Fond of" is not a single word, therefore it is not simply one part of speech, but two. "Fond" is an adjective: "I am fond of him," or "He is my fondest friend." "Of" is a preposition, beginning prepositional phrases such as "of him," "of Alaska," or "of swimming with sharks."
There is no such picture for them kissing. You can find them kissing in the movie
There is no deleted kissing scene.
"Grew fond" or "grew fond of" means the more time you spend with someone or something, the more you liked them or it.
who that girl i saw mackenize rosman kissing that girl was Ashley tistale
mistletoe
l;ll
My brother is very fond of the cane he made from the gnarled root of a tree.
yes of coarse there once was an explorer who fond a whole tree with bunches of oranges
Yeah if she was fond of them and liked both of them together ...or if she grew kinda close or used to having them around together
Raccoons are fond of eating nuts. They may also climb a tree to escape a predator.
He was fond of peas but not fond of spinach.He was not found of homework, but loved reading novels.As the opposite of fond, "not fond" means it isn't something you find pleasant or exciting.
Of course! Here is an example sentence using "fond of": "She is fond of reading books in her free time."
yes my friend shamar is gay he has a boyfriend named Alex he did not want to tell me that he is gay but I fond him kissing MY BROTHER ALEX LAST FIRDAY I knew my brother was gay too but I did not want him to know that i was spying on him
i am fond for my friend
He was very fond of her
No, "fond" is not a preposition. It is an adjective that describes a feeling of affection or liking.