I admire my parents, because they started their company with nothing just the courage and persistence. I remember every stage and how they dealt with the circumstances around. Today they have a really good company, and me and my brothers are thankful for everything they invested in our life. Like my father says: the world is the size you want it to be! And for some reason today all my family is successful in everything we do. We believe that everything depends do way you look, obstacles make people stronger and we learnt this through my parents.
The verb for admiration is admire. As in the action "to admire something or someone".
Dw i'n edmygu (I admire) Dych chi'n edmygu (you admire)
It is not a sin to admire a priest as long as you admire him for the right reasons.
i admire you personality
request:entreat::admire:
Whom you love most you too admire them most. Also, some of the people admire someone for their own selfishness. In fact, they do not admire them really.
No, admirer is a noun. For the verb to admire, the adjectives include admired and admirable.
Not all verbs are used as phrasal verbs. I think admire is one of them.
suck his schlong you just tell him you like him and admire him you just tell him you like him and admire him you just tell him you like him and admire him you just tell him you like him and admire him you just tell him you like him and admire him
they admire men men Men
'admire" IS the present tense
to admire is 'admirer' in French.