Contenido

To love

de Donniedillon, 8 de septiembre de 2009

Aportes: 16

Idioma: English

jchthys (Mostrar perfil) 8 de septiembre de 2009 17:44:29

ceigered:Was it the Greeks that had several words for love, each with a difference nuance?
Yep—ερως, αγαπη and φιλια, and I think another rarer one.

jchthys (Mostrar perfil) 8 de septiembre de 2009 17:45:20

mnlg:
ceigered:Hahaha I take it that was accidentally your 1000th post?
Not accidental. I like round numbers as much as everyone, but I had nothing planned for my 1000th post...
I like base-2 numbers. Why not something special for your 1024th post?

mnlg (Mostrar perfil) 8 de septiembre de 2009 17:59:52

jchthys:I like base-2 numbers. Why not something special for your 1024th post?
Hmmm, I might have something not special for that post as well, stay tuned!

ceigered (Mostrar perfil) 9 de septiembre de 2009 05:42:20

My 1024th post was asking mnlg if he accidentally used up his 1000th post... darn lango.gif

And cheers jchthys for the greek words - I remembered eros, just not the rest lango.gif

outs (Mostrar perfil) 9 de septiembre de 2009 09:33:24

Donniedillon:Can I amas all of those things too, or would that be incorrect usage of ami ?
It's funny you ask that, because as an English speaker you have two verbs for that : to love and to like. For example, in French there are only one verb for all the usage of love/like (which is aimer).

From what I read (I'm maybe wrong), on the beginning in eo they only had ami, and some peoples complained and wanted to distinguish between peoples and objects. So they came to used ŝati for objects.

Greyshades (Mostrar perfil) 13 de septiembre de 2009 18:03:14

My knowledge of the Greek language is probably equivelant to my post count... Very, very small lango.gif

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