0
User_gary Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

less affection, less love, less likeness

My girlfriend used to be very affectionate with me, but now she seems to be little less affectionate with me, and I don't know why she is so. I think, perhaps, it has come down to money.

Is this sentence correct? [Also, is there any single word to mean, "less affection" or "reduce in love" less "reduce in likeness"]
  

Top answer

User_gary My girlfriend used to be very affectionate with me, but now she seems to be a little less affectionate with me , and I don't know why she is so . I think, perhaps, it comes down to money. Is this sentence correct?

  • User_gary My girlfriend used to be very affectionate with me, but now she seems to be a little less affectionate with me , and I don't know why she is so .
  • I think, perhaps, it comes down to money.
  • Is this sentence correct?
  • [Also, is there any single word to mean, "less affection" or "reduce in love" less "reduce in likeness"]
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

2 Answers
0
User_garyMy girlfriend used to be very affectionate with me, but now she seems to be a little less affectionate with me, and I don't know why she is so. I think, perhaps, it comes down to money.

Is this sentence correct? [Also, is there any single word to mean, "le
0
Hi,

In Canada, I think Mary has gone off me means that she liked me before, but now I think she doesn't. It's informal speech.

You can also say it about things, eg I've gone off this kind of beer. I used to like it, but now I don't, or not very much.

Clive

Related Questions