Lazy language? Culturally corrupt? Socially sinful? Emotionally easy?
adoration
affection
ardor
amourousness
attachment
attraction
caring
concern
cherish
compassion
consideration
crush
dedication
desire
devotion
enamorement
endearment
enthusiasm
fancy
favor
fondness
infatuation
liking
limerence
longing
love
lust
partiality
passion
propensity
romance
solicitude
tenderness
zeal
With so many English words that could be used and might even communicate the feeling more accurately, why do most people use the word “Love” instead of another word?
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The word love is overused, especially in relationships. The phrase "I love you" doesn't have any special meaning at all; people say it all the time. Everybody uses the word love: lovers, the media, and anywhere else on the planet. Even in the bible, the word love is overused:
"Love is patient; love is kind and envies no one. Love is never boastful, nor conceited, nor rude; never selfish, not quick to take offence. Love keeps no score of wrongs; does not gloat over another's sins, but delights in the truth. There is nothing love cannot face; there is not limit to its faith, its hope, and its endurance. In a word, there are three things that last forever: faith, hope, and love; but the greatest of them all is love."
Love is a simple word, but it is misused and overused.
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The Word Love
The word love is overused, and abused.
Love is the feeling we experiment when we live our life in plenitude, and this is an activity that involves the stimulation of life around us.
Easy as that.
If this concept seems cold and superficial, it could be because we might have a cold and superficial notion of life.
Love is a very pleasurable experience, and for this reason we have ended confusing love with mere pleasure, even when a pleasant activity can actually be a loveless act.
Loving, as a rhetorical promise of giving or receiving pleasure, is also used as a way to posses, manipulate or control other persons. We tell someone we love them when we want to condition that person to our needs.
Love is also a word used to justify attachment, submission, or dependence.
The word love softens the connotation of selfish desires like lust, desire, possessiveness, and even fear.
That’s why we use it extensively.
But in the end, in the bottom, in its core, love is the joy of life. A joy which can be felt by providing ourselves and others with all the things that fulfill our needs as living creatures.
This certainly includes a healthy sexual life, the protection of the ones close to us, and all the things we have associated with this word. But it also includes giving freedom (to others as well as our selves), taking care of whatever is within our own environment, accepting things the way they are, and not looking forward for a compensation for this, but having the capacity of being instantly rewarded by the joy of knowing that the subject of our love is the way he or she has to be, in spite of what we think should be the best.
Yes, Love is the most Abused and Overused word in the English dictionary. True, unconditional love from God or any other dignified person/prophet such as Jesus, Buddha, Mohammed is more correctly used than others. So are most parental love and romantic love.
But we know that love has many levels of meaning, of hidden agendas, is temporal.
It depends on the speaker the word "Love", whether he/she really means it. But to the listener, to hear "Love" is actually a warm, fuzzy feeling though, strangely only this word works better than others... Thats why people use it... because people want to hear it...
pretty often used and overused just like the word HATE . why ? well i think this is mainly because of two reason :
laziness and the way the Americans culture works .
in today's American society , people do not take the time to think what they say and most of the time do not really feel what they say or they just do not have the words to say what they mean . all this sadly because we as Americans had forgotten whats really important , which is to educate ourselves and to try to be open to others opinions .
the way American society has work until now has also produced to be very general when speaking . people often used hate and love because they had grown being extreme . the American society doesn't allowed them to be in a middle ground and often requires them to take one side or another there is not middle ground . so Americans usually reflect this on the way they speak making them say "i love u" when they do not feel it or "i hate u" whit out feeling it either .
so all this is the product of laziness , lack of proper education ( the first step to freedom is to recognize who we are ) and the way Americans have grown thinking that there always has to be right and wrong and not something which doesn't fit this scheme .
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the word love is misunderstood in the fact that we have to use the same word -love - for our liking of friends, boyfriends/girlfriends, parents, cookies, movies, twilight, music, books, etc. and because it is so misunderstood, it is very overused almost to the point now that is has been worn thin & has very little meaning anymore. 'love' has been turned into a new slang word and doesn't mean at all what it should to people.
Definitely, especially by people who really have no clue what it even means, and don't feel it, and are -- to be blunt -- lying about it. Men who think it's the only way to get into the bedroom; women who think it's a guarantee of a ring.
This is not to say that the words you have listed are all synonyms; far from it. Rather, they deal with the nuances of relationships in ways that the poor, worn-out word "love" does not.
The problem may be validly laid at the feet of us Baby Boomers, who started using the word Love as a weapon, a piece of political rhetoric, all sorts of things it was never meant to do. Let's separate out the word from its cognates and near-cognates, and start looking for more precise terms for our relationships.
And parents, don't end every phone conversation with your kids with an obligatory "I love you," extorting a response in kind. They are learning to be insincere, which is going to come back to haunt you. If you already have this habit, of course it will be necessary to explain why you intend to break it. But please, do break it.
I think the word love has a purer and more direct impact on us than these other words. Certainly there are many, many times when one of the words you list or others would be more meaningful than the word love. So, I think its a combination of using the word with the most impact in some cases and and others where limited vocabuaries or imagination just don't find the more appropriate word.
Gosh golly I just LOVE this question! Yes, the word is most certainly over used and abused, it does not carry the same weight it used to, but on the other hand if you are going to tell a person for the first time that you Love Them all the meaning does seem to come crashing in on you....it once again become a very heavy and meaningful word.
Hi Richard,
I confess to using the word love a lot. I Love a lot. There just aren't any other words with so much meaning applied to them. You can "love" love someone and "crush" on someone but then your love would crush them which I guess would be a bad thing. Confusing yes, overused, no. It can only be bad if used against it's heartfelt meaning.
Like I just love french fries?
Well no, I don't use it that way. I love my Husband.
I love my mother and father. Yes, I love my cats.
But ahh love why should anyone use it in the same context as the love they have for something they have a true spiritual bond with.
L.M Montgomery spoke of this in one of the Emily books.
A character asked if another girl used this word to describe a frivolity with the same word you should reserve for your saviour or your mother.
People are far too anxious to use this word to simplify things and I think it gets thrown around too much.