“Of course, I would love having a coffee with you.”
“The locals love their ancestors, and their attachment to family land is almost visceral.”
“Paul kept saying that he was made to love her, and that she was made to love him. He then remarked that he couldn't get enough of her, and asked if she could get enough of him.”
love
(transitive, obsolete or Britain dialectal) To praise; commend.
(transitive, obsolete or Britain dialectal) To praise as of value; prize; set a price on.
“Of course, I would love having a coffee with you.”
“The locals love their ancestors, and their attachment to family land is almost visceral.”
“Paul kept saying that he was made to love her, and that she was made to love him. He then remarked that he couldn't get enough of her, and asked if she could get enough of him.”
“It is so light and so fleeting, tender and tearful and dark, that is why thou lovest it, O thou spotless and serene.”
“Mark me, raphe, an thou lovest me, guard the Lady Bridget as thou wouldst a sister.”
“If she is holy, she runs to meet thee with the face of her righteousness, and finds in thee a face resembling her own, for thou, O righteous Lord, lovest all righteousness.”
lovedst
(archaic) second-person singular simple past form of love
lovedest
(archaic) second-person singular simple past form of love