1. Passion. Amour fou.
2. Sentiment. Amour de la justice.
3. Intérêt. Amour des dentelles.
ETYM French, from Latin amor love.
(French) love-affair, especially illicit. amorette, petty amour.
1. Love; affection.
2. Love making; a love affair; usually, an unlawful connection in love; a love intrigue; an illicit love affair.
ETYM Hebrew kerűb.
1. A sweet innocent baby.
2. An angel of the second order whose gift is knowledge; usually portrayed as a winged child.
Type of angel in Christian belief, usually depicted as a young child with wings. Cherubim form the second order of angels.
ETYM Latin, from Greek eros love.
1. Sexual drive; libido.
2. The sum of all desires.
ETYM Old Eng. love, luve, as. lufe, lufu; akin to Eng. lief, believe, Latin lubet, libet,it pleases, Skr. lubh to be lustful. Related to Lief.
1. A deep feeling of sexual desire and attraction.
2. Any object of warm affection or devotion; or; SYN. passion.
3. A strong positive emotion of regard and affection.
4. A score of zero in tennis or squash.
Affectionate or passionate devotion to another being. The Greeks often distinguished fondness or friendship (philis), erotic love (eros), and selfless love (agape).
Plato and Aristotle both hold that love is ultimately the desire of the imperfect for the perfect, whereas in Christianity love arises from the concern of the perfect (God) for the imperfect (human beings). St Augustine defines virtue as ordo amoris (“the order of love”), which occurs when the love of God replaces the love of self. For St Thomas Aquinas, natural love concerns the passions and will, whereas supernatural love is natural love to which has been added habitual unselfishness.
ETYM French, from Latin passio, from pati, passus, to suffer. Related to Patient.
1. A feeling of strong sexual desire.
2. Strong feeling or emotion; SYN. passionateness.
ETYM Old Eng. romance, romant, romaunt, Old Fren. romanz, romans, romant, roman, French roman, romance, from Late Lat. Romanice in the Roman language, in the vulgar tongue, i.e., in the vulgar language which sprang from Latin.
A novel dealing with idealized events remote from everyday life.