Upon learning Claudio IIgave the order to imprison and marty it, until they finally executed it on February 14, 270. Therefore, Valentine is considered the employer of the lovers.
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Valentine’s Day: “Make Love” and other popular expressions
Love and sexuality seem to have their own language. It is usual to warn how each person and each couple use different expressions to refer to the sexual act, to the sexual organs or different actions included in the love courtship. However, some phrases and words seem to be a unanimous agreement, many of them overcoming borders.
Where does the expression “make love” come from?
According to Yolanda del peso bouquetsSpecialist in Languages of the PREPLY platform, this phrase comes from French “Faire l’amour” During the fifteenth century. At that time, its meaning was not linked to the sexual but to “court or pay loving attention to …”, said the expert, while adding that her use for the action of having sex arose in the United States long later, already in the twentieth century. Thus, the specialist explains that this is linked to movement hippiewhose main slogan, in the middle of the Vietnam War and also in the post -war period used the slogan “Make love and not war!”.
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But, when referring to sex, Other expressions gained ground. One of the most popular (so much that even the Royal Spanish Academy recognizes it) is “to take.”
The RAE describes it as “performing the sexual act”, after clarifying that it is a vulgar word. Among the synonyms mentioned are “Copular, fornicate, take and fuck.” According to PREPY Language Specialist, one of the meaning of the SAR is: “Said of the male of certain species: cover the female.”
In ancient Spain, particularly in the Andalusian region, an extrapolation towards humans was generated and there arises a new use to refer to having sex, however it fell into disuse in the Iberian area but was very popular in Latin America.
So massive is the use of this word that in 2019 a RAE tweet went viral after the consultation of a user in the social network X (at that time, Twitter): “Hi, @raeinforma. The following is a very frequent doubt among us, Twitter users. We would like to know if ‘I invite you to see Netflix’ written with G or J ”.
Accomplices with the consultation, from @raeinforma they replied: “In any of its meanings, in the verb” take “they are written with” g “the ways in which the sound [j] It goes before “e”, “i”: take, took; And with “J” the ways in which that sound goes before “a”, “o”: lame, we take. “
But if it is about love and seduction, there is more within the scope of language. Where does the phrase come from “Dying the dogs”? While today it is used as a synonym for flirting or seduce, its origin is very different. The PREPLY specialist said that it arose from the hand of bullfighting, based on the moment during the runs the bull did not obey the bullfighter when he asked him to ram the cape. As a punishment, then, a hole was released that attacked and bit the bull.
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Another expression that extended during the sixties and returned in recent years is “plate”. It is used when talking about fiery kisses and comes from the Italian “Acchiapare”, which means “grab” or “catch” strongly, explains the weight of Ramos. Therefore, from the Italian immigration in our country, this lunfardo was generated by referring because that exchange of passion, seen from the outside, seemed two people who were grabbing.
The languages of love in social networks: “Lovebombing”, “Ghostar” and “Red Flag”
Sometimes, sexAffective ties have complications. Currently and in the middle of the social networks various expressions describe some alert signals. One of them is “Red Flag”. From Prety they explained that “red flag” refers to the danger signs about negative or risky aspects of someone with whom he had or is about to have an appointment. Logically it comes from motor racing where a red flag is used to warn the pilots that there are dangers on the track so they must go slower.
Another very present today is “Lovebombing”. It is used to describe the practice in which someone shoots a “love bomb” exaggerated, in reference to a large number of gifts, attention or words of love at the beginning of a relationship. Ghosting, meanwhile, derives from the English term “Ghost”. “Fantastic,” said the PREPLY specialist, is linked to the act of disappearing without a trace, of ending an incipient or more formalized link without any explanation or farewell.
How to say “I love you” around the world
From Prety they investigated how it is said “I love you” in different languages around the world. The English “I love you” is used in Australia, Canada, the United States, New Zealand, United Kingdom and other English -speaking countries as a way of expressing affection for someone.
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Blindlove
In Spanish -speaking countries, the most common way of expressing love is saying “I love you” or “I love you.” While both expressions are used, I love you “has a more relaxed tone and is considered less intense than” I love you “, which is used on special occasions and when you want to express a deeper feeling.
In France, “I love you” is “je t’aime”; In South Africa, it is “Ek Het Jou Lief”; and, in Germany, “Ich Liebe Dich.” How will Queen Máxima express it? Simple, in the Netherlands it is said “Ik Hou van Jou”.
Source: Ambito

I am an author and journalist who has worked in the entertainment industry for over a decade. I currently work as a news editor at a major news website, and my focus is on covering the latest trends in entertainment. I also write occasional pieces for other outlets, and have authored two books about the entertainment industry.