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  1. Dictionary
    Fall in love
    • develop a deep romantic or sexual attachment to someone

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  2. Dec 18, 2013 · When we regard love as something we simply fall into, we can easily slip into routines with the person we value or lose a sense of separateness and respect. Instead, we view that person as a...

    • You Want to Share Your World with them.
    • They’Re Always in Your Thoughts.
    • And You’Re Dying to Know If They Love You, too.
    • You Feel Like A Teenager again.
    • They Become A priority.
    • You Crave them.
    • You Even Find Their Quirks attractive.
    • They Make You Feel Better About yourself.
    • You’Re Ignoring Other Attractive people.
    • You Feel The Love Everywhere.

    Dawoon Kang, cofounder and co-CEO of online dating platform Coffee Meets Bagel, tells Oprah Daily, “Falling in love is different for everyone,” adding she believes in Robert J. Sternberg’s triangular theory of love, which identifies three main aspects: intimacy (the desire to feel closely connected), passion (physical and emotional stimulation), an...

    Sure, it might be trite—but it’s true. You know you’re falling in love when your someone begins to take up major real estate in your thoughts. You might find yourself rehashing your conversations in the middle of work, thinking about your next date days in advance, or even envisioning your future together. For Kang, she remembers rereading her husb...

    If you find yourself considering whether this person feels similarly and you look for for signs that they're missing you, too, that's another signifier, Jacqueline Olds, MD, an associate professor of clinical psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, tells Oprah Daily. “Your stomach and heart may take a leap every time they contact you or suggest spend...

    Falling in love has a way of making you feel like a wide-eyed, wild-hearted teenager again, and that's no coincidence, says Kelifern Pomeranz, PsyD, a California-based clinical psychologist and certified sex therapist. "When you fall in love, your body produces a cocktail of chemicals, including dopamine (for wanting more), noradrenaline (for excit...

    “We make time for what–or who–we love,” says Rachel DeAlto, the chief dating expert for Match (formerly known as Match.com). “If you’re rearranging, reprioritizing, and reimagining your life, you may be falling in love,” she explains. Equally important: It doesn't feel like a sacrifice when you have to make changes to your calendar (say, brunch wit...

    Yes, you read that right. Similar to how you can crave a favorite food or even a seasonal cocktail (hello, frosé), you can crave a person, too. Match’s chief scientific advisor, Helen Fisher, PhD, has studied these feelings and found that an area of our brain associated with focus and craving called the ventral tegmental area (VTA) causes increased...

    Perpetual apologizer? Neat freak? All (innocuous) traits of your beloved are fair game and welcomed when you’re falling in love. “You start to find everything about them irresistible," explains DeAlto. "That even includes their little quirks, their odd sense of style, and their particular way of doing things, which all become endearing.” There is o...

    People in the throes of falling in love often report feeling like they know more, or can do more, according to Theresa E. DiDonato, PhD, an associate professor of psychology at Loyola University Maryland. She describes how an experience of “self-expansion” often occurs as people fall in love, meaning their own sense of self grows through their rela...

    Gone are the days of swiping right on dating appsor DM'ing other potential partners. If you realize you’re not as inclined to investigate those other fish in the sea, that can be telling, DiDonato tells Oprah Daily. “Falling in love may correspond with changes in attention–specifically people in loving, committed relationships show less attention t...

    Finding yourself suddenly enjoying small chat with your less-than-pleasant coworker, or striking up conversations with your crabby neighbor? Your loved-up vibes could certainly be radiating beyond your partnership, notes Pomeranz. "Falling in love can knock us out of autopilot and allow us to see everything and everyone in a new light. Love can con...

    • Catherine Winter
    • Realization That You’re Interested In This Person As More Than A Friend. This often strikes out of nowhere and leaves you with your jaw hanging somewhere around Antarctica.
    • Preoccupation. The person you’re falling for is constantly in your thoughts. You overfill your coffee cup because you’re thinking about them, your eyes glaze over in class or during a meeting at work because you’re trying to determine your next step.
    • Idolization. Everything they do is just so cute, isn’t it? Yeaaaah. It is. It REALLY is. Also known as “the smittening,” this stage turns you into a quibbling mess of heartsick jelly that’s just oozing with delight about everything your partner does.
    • Awkwardness And Insecurity. This is where you’re getting seriously involved with the person, but you’re still uncertain about exactly how they feel about you because you’re too nervous to discuss it, so you’re awkward and flustered and you worry about what you say (BREATHE) and think that they probably believe you’re a complete idiot and did they notice that you forgot your deodorant today omg you better not hug them too closely (BREATHE) but if you don’t hug them then they might think you don’t really like them as much as you do but you don’t want them to think you smell and and and (PANICKED BREATHING)…
  3. phrase. Add to word list. B1. to start to love someone romantically and sexually: I was 20 when I first fell in love. He isn't the first boy to fall in love with her and he certainly won't be the last. The plot involves a lawyer who falls in love with her client.

  4. May 13, 2024 · fall in love. phrase. If you fall in love with someone, you start to be in love with them. I fell in love with him because of his kind nature. [+ with] We fell madly in love. See full dictionary entry for love. Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner’s Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers.

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