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- I love you to bits - WordReference Forums
i love him to bits is more an expression of fondness than of romantic love when you say that you love you sister, you don't love her in the same way as you partner i love you to bits is an expression to express the friendship family type of love and its a "strong" way of doing it it is not for you partner
- I 社都出品过哪些经典游戏? - 知乎
2012年:Love Girl、我才是主人公、Happy End Trigger。 2013年:猎影之狼、萌娘育成坊。 2014年:背德病栋、人工学园2、真实游戏。 2015年:游戏俱乐部、性感海滩PR 2016年:性运魔球、后宫伴侣、HoneySelect 2017年:VR女友、Play Home 2018年:恋活 2019年:情感工坊、AI少女
- Love at the end of a letter: punctuation | WordReference Forums
Dear Teachers, Namaskar When only "Love" is written just before above the sender's name at the end of an informal letter, what punctuation mark should
- Fall in love for or with?? - WordReference Forums
fall in love for (someone something) or fall in love with (someone something) ? For instance, John and Mary fell in love in Texas and fell in love with Texas (meaning: they met in Texas and fell for each other, and also fell for Texas so they decided to live there) Many thanks Bee
- Love is a touch and yet not a touch | WordReference Forums
Or could it mean "love is an unfinished touch, the one that you reach out your hand but stopped halfway"? It is from J D Salinger's The Heart of a Broken Story And to be more accurate, in the story, it is from a hypothetical love letter that a prisoner could have written to a woman he met and fell in love with at first sight, Miss Lester, on a bus
- 有哪些好看又特别的情侣头像? - 知乎
知乎,中文互联网高质量的问答社区和创作者聚集的原创内容平台,于 2011 年 1 月正式上线,以「让人们更好的分享知识、经验和见解,找到自己的解答」为品牌使命。知乎凭借认真、专业、友善的社区氛围、独特的产品机制以及结构化和易获得的优质内容,聚集了中文互联网科技、商业、影视
- ML到底是什么? - 知乎
似乎全称是Master Love,前几天听到这个词来自于fgo,我玩fgo竟然不知道,这个ML到底是个啥?
- Gerund, infinitive: I lt;enjoy, like, love gt; lt;eating, to eat gt; pizza.
The answer to the question of why the "gerund" or "to infinitive" is used with "like", "love, "prefer", "hate" is that "to infinitive" is usual in American English, whereas "gerund" is more common in British English, although the "to infinitive" is becoming more common in international English due to Americanisation
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