love
noun /lʌv/
/lʌv/
Idioms - She has earned the love and respect of many people.
- love for somebody/something a mother’s unconditional love for her children
- love of somebody/something love of your country
Extra ExamplesTopics Family and relationshipsa1, Feelingsa1- From John, she received the love she had never received from her father.
- He seems incapable of love.
- They lavish love on Selah, their cat.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- all-consuming
- burning
- deep
- …
- feel
- have
- experience
- …
- bloom
- blossom
- grow
- …
- affair
- triangle
- life
- …
- for love
- out of love
- in love
- …
- an act of love
- deeply in love
- madly in love
- …
- I'm sure you will find true love.
- in love We're in love!
- They're madly in love.
- She has been in and out of love many times.
- in love with somebody She was in love with him.
- They fell in love with each other.
- There wasn't anyone else in his life; he simply fell out of love with her.
- love for somebody They finally expressed their love for each other.
- It was love at first sight (= they were attracted to each other the first time they met).
- It is a story of unrequited love (= love that is not returned).
- romantic/undying/passionate love
- a love song/story
Wordfinder- affair
- date
- go out with somebody
- jealous
- love
- marriage
- partner
- passionate
- relationship
- romantic
Extra ExamplesTopics Feelingsa1- At last she had found true love.
- Does she doubt my love for her?
- He did not know how to express his love for her.
- He didn't return her love.
- I did it for love!
- In his music dramas, love conquers all.
- Love blossomed between the two of them.
- She felt no love for him.
- They publicly declared their love for each other.
- You have my undying love.
- Their love grew with the years.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- all-consuming
- burning
- deep
- …
- feel
- have
- experience
- …
- bloom
- blossom
- grow
- …
- affair
- triangle
- life
- …
- for love
- out of love
- in love
- …
- an act of love
- deeply in love
- madly in love
- …
- love of something They shared a love of learning.
- love for something her love for her garden
- in love with something He's in love with his work.
- I fell in love with the house.
Extra Examples- He developed a lifelong love of music.
- He had a great love of life.
- He had an abiding love of the English countryside.
- His wealth enabled him to indulge his love of fast cars.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- all-consuming
- burning
- deep
- …
- feel
- have
- experience
- …
- bloom
- blossom
- grow
- …
- affair
- triangle
- life
- …
- for love
- out of love
- in love
- …
- an act of love
- deeply in love
- madly in love
- …
- Take care, my love.
- He was the love of my life (= the person I loved most).
- I like most sports but tennis is my first love.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- all-consuming
- burning
- deep
- …
- feel
- have
- experience
- …
- bloom
- blossom
- grow
- …
- affair
- triangle
- life
- …
- for love
- out of love
- in love
- …
- an act of love
- deeply in love
- madly in love
- …
- [countable] (British English, informal) a word used as a friendly way of addressing somebody
- Can I help you, love?
- [uncountable] a score of zero (points or games)
- 40–love!
- She won the first set six-love/six games to love.
liking and caring
romantic
pleasure
somebody/something you like
friendly name
in tennis
Word OriginOld English lufu, of Germanic origin; from an Indo-European root shared by Sanskrit lubhyati ‘desires’, Latin libet ‘it is pleasing’, libido ‘desire’, also by the noun leave and lief.
Idioms
all’s fair in love and war
- (saying) in some situations any type of behaviour is acceptable to get what you want
cupboard love
- (British English, old-fashioned) love that somebody, especially a child, shows towards somebody else in order to get something
(just) for love | (just) for the love of something
- without receiving payment or any other reward
- They're all volunteers, working for the love of it.
for the love of God
- (old-fashioned, informal) used when you are expressing anger and the fact that you are impatient
- For the love of God, tell me what he said!
give/send my love to somebody
- (informal) used to send good wishes to somebody
- Give my love to Mary when you see her.
- Bob sends his love.
head over heels in love
- loving somebody very much
- He's fallen head over heels in love with his boss.
a labour of love
- a hard task that you do because you want to, not because it is necessary
- Writing the book was a labour of love.
love from | (lots of) love (from)
- (informal) used at the end of a letter to a friend or to somebody you love, followed by your name
- Lots of love, Jenny
- See you soon. Love, Steve.
love is blind
- (saying) when you love somebody, you cannot see their faults
make love (to somebody)
- to have sex
- It was the first time they had made love.
not for love or/nor money
- if you say you cannot do something for love nor money, you mean it is completely impossible to do it
- We couldn't find a taxi for love nor money.
there’s little/no love lost between A and B
- they do not like each other
- There's no love lost between her and her in-laws.