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A LITTLE PIECE OF MY HEART

we all need a little love
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January 18

pressies

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Thank you so much Gaylene
I love  em 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Thanl you   Miz Angel
it's  great  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Thank you Noelle
really nice 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Thanks  Carolyn
its  great 

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Roses

 

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If you give your love a red, red rose....         Roses have had meaning since the dawn of time. Everyone knows that a red rose is a symbol for love but did you know that when you give a bouquet of white and red roses, it means unity?
Read on to learn what your favorite roses mean in the very special language of flowers. In Victorian times, suitors would present a bouquet to their intended that held much meaning once the flowers were  looked at. These bouquets were called "tussie-mussies" and every courtship began with their presentation. The content of these tokens often changed as the relationship did until the bride walked down the aisle with the most meaningful bouquet.
In Victorian times, suitors would present a bouquet to their intended that held much meaning once the flowers were looked at. These bouquets were called "tussie-mussies" and every courtship began with their presentation. The content of these tokens often changed as the relationship did until the bride walked down the aisle with the most meaningful bouquet.

 

Red roses say “I love you” and also stand for respect and courage. 

Rosebuds symbolize beauty, youth and a heart innocent of love or:  “You are young and beautiful.”  Red rosebuds mean “pure and lovely” and white rosebuds signify girlhood or “too young to love.” The moss rosebud stands for confessions of love. 

A single rose stands for simplicity.  In full bloom, it means “I love you” or “I love you still,” and a bouquet of roses in full bloom signifies gratitude. 

White roses have several meanings:  “You’re heavenly,” reverence and humility, innocence and purity, “I’m worthy of you,” and secrecy and silence. 

Red and white roses together, or white roses with red edges, signify unity. 
 
Pink roses in general symbolize grace and gentility.  For more subtle shades of meaning, choose deep pink to stand for gratitude and appreciation.  Light pink conveys admiration and sympathy. 

Yellow roses usually stand for joy and gladness, but can also say “try to care.” 

Red and yellow blends stand for jovial and happy feelings. 

Coral or orange roses denote enthusiasm and desire. 

A deep burgundy rose means “unconscious beauty.” 

Pale colors convey sociability and friendship. 

Hybrid tea roses mean “I’ll remember you always” and sweetheart roses symbolize just what their name implies. 

Two roses taped or wired together to form a single stem signal an engagement or coming marriage. 

A full blown rose placed over two buds forms a combination that signifies secrecy. 

Withered white roses have two meanings:  fleeting beauty and “you made no impression.

A crown made of roses signifies reward or virtue. 
 
Rose leaves are a symbol of hope.  

” 

 

 


 
Roses have had meaning since the dawn of time. Everyone knows that a red rose is a symbol for love but did you know that when you give a bouquet of white and red roses, it means unity?
Read on to learn what your favorite roses mean in the very special language of flowers.

In Victorian times, suitors wouresent a bouquet to their intended that held much meaning once the flowers were looked at. These bouquets were called "tussie-mussies" and every courtship began with their presentation. The content of these tokens often changed as the relationship did until the bride walked down the aisle with the most meaningful bouquet.
 

 

Valentines Cards

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Valentine Cards

Traditionally, mid-February was a Roman time to meet and court prospective mates. The Lupercian lottery (under penalty of mortal sin), Roman young men did institute the custom of offering women they admired and wished to court handwritten greetings of affection on February 14. The cards acquired St. Valentine's name:

As Christianity spread, so did the Valentine's Day card. The earliest extant card was sent in 1415 by Charles, duke of Orleans, to his wife while he was a prisoner in the Tower of London. It is now in the British Museum.

In the sixteenth century, St. Francis de Sales, bishop of Geneva, attempted to expunge the custom of cards and reinstate the lottery of saints' names. He felt that Christians had become wayward and needed models to emulate. However, this lottery was less successful and shorter-lived than Pope Gelasius's. And rather than disappearing, cards proliferated and became more decorative. Cupid, the naked cherub armed with arrows dipped in love potion, became a popular valentine image. He was associated with the holiday because in Roman mythology he is the son of Venus, goddess of love and beauty.

By the seventeenth century, handmade cards were oversized and elaborate, while store-bought ones were smaller and costly. In 1797, a British publisher issued "The Young Man's Valentine Writer," which contained scores of suggested sentimental verses for the young lover unable to compose his own. Printers had already begun producing a limited number of cards with verses and sketches, called "mechanical valentines," and a reduction in postal rates in the next century ushered in the less personal but easier practice of mailing valentines. That, in turn, made it possible for the first time to exchange cards anonymously, which is taken as the reason for the sudden appearance of racy verse in an era otherwise prudishly Victorian. The burgeoning number of obscene valentines caused several countries to ban the practice of exchanging cards. In Chicago, for instance, late in the nineteenth century, the post office rejected some twenty-five thousand cards on the ground that they were not fit to be carried through the U.S. mail.

The first American publisher of valentines was printer and artist Esther Howland. Her elaborate lace cards of the 1870's cost from five to ten dollars, with some selling for as much as thirty-five dollars. Since that time, the valentine card business has flourished. With the exception of Christmas, Americans exchange more cards on Valentine's Day than at any other time of the year..

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I Love You From Around The World

 

Afrikaans -

Ek het jou lief

Albanian -

Te dua

Arabic -

Ana behibak (to male)

Arabic -

Ana behibek (to female)

Armenian -

Yes kez sirumen

Bambara -

M'bi fe

Bangla -

Aamee tuma ke bhalo baashi

Belarusian -

Ya tabe kahayu

Bisaya -

Nahigugma ako kanimo

Bulgarian -

Obicham te

Cambodian -

Bung Srorlagn Oun (to female)
Oun Srorlagn Bung (to male)

Cantonese/Chinese

 Ngo oiy ney a

Catalan -

T'estimo

Cheyenne -

Ne mohotatse

Chichewa -

Ndimakukonda

Corsican -

Ti tengu caru (to male)

Creol -

Mi aime jou

Croatian -

Volim te

Czech -

Miluji te

Danish -

Jeg Elsker Dig

Dutch -

Ik hou van jou

English -

I love you

Esperanto -

Mi amas vin

Estonian -

Ma armastan sind

Ethiopian -

Ewedishalehu : male/female to female
Ewedihalehu: male/female to male.

Faroese -

Eg elski teg

Farsi -

Doset daram

Filipino -

Mahal kita

Finnish -

Mina rakastan sinua

French -

Je t'aime, Je t'adore

Gaelic -

Ta gra agam ort

Georgian -

Mikvarhar

German -

Ich liebe dich

Greek -

S'agapo

Gujarati -

Hu tumney prem karu chu

Hiligaynon -

Palangga ko ikaw

Hawaiian -

Aloha wau ia oi

Hebrew -

Ani ohev otah (to female)

Hebrew -

Ani ohev et otha (to male)

Hiligaynon -

Guina higugma ko ikaw

Hindi -

Hum Tumhe Pyar Karte hai

Hmong -

Kuv hlub koj

Hopi -

Nu' umi unangwa'ta

Hungarian -

Szeretlek

Icelandic -

Eg elska tig

Ilonggo -

Palangga ko ikaw

Indonesian -

Saya cinta padamu

Inuit -

Negligevapse

Irish -

Taim i' ngra leat

Italian -

Ti amo

Japanese -

Aishiteru

Kannada -

Naa ninna preetisuve

Kapampangan -

Kaluguran daka

Kiswahili -

Nakupenda

Konkani -

Tu magel moga cho

Korean -

Sarang Heyo

Latin -

Te amo

Latvian -

Es tevi miilu

Lebanese -

Bahibak

Lithuanian -

Tave myliu

Malay -

Saya cintakan mu / Aku cinta padamu

Malayalam -

Njan Ninne Premikunnu

Mandarin Chinese -

Wo ai ni

Marathi -

Me tula prem karto

Mohawk -

Kanbhik

Moroccan -

Ana moajaba bik

Nahuatl -

Ni mits neki

Navaho -

Ayor anosh'ni

Nepali -

Ma Timilai Maya Garchhu

Norwegian -

Jeg Elsker Deg

Pandacan -

Syota na kita!!

Pangasinan -

Inaru Taka

Papiamento -

Mi ta stimabo

Persian -

Doo-set daaram

Pig Latin -

Iay ovlay ouyay

Polish -

Kocham Cie

Portuguese -

Eu te amo

Romanian -

Te ubesc

Roman Numerals -

333

Russian -

Ya tebya liubliu

Scot Gaelic -

Tha gra\dh agam ort

Serbian -

Volim te

Setswana -

Ke a go rata

Sign Language -

,\,,/ (represents position of fingers when signing 'I Love You'

Sindhi -

Maa tokhe pyar kendo ahyan

Sioux -

Techihhila

Slovak -

Lu`bim ta

Slovenian -

Ljubim te

Spanish -

Te quiero / Te amo

Surinam-

Mi lobi joe

Swahili -

Ninapenda wewe

Swedish -

Jag alskar dig

Swiss-German -

Ich lieb Di

Tagalog -

Mahal kita

Taiwanese -

Wa ga ei li

Tahitian -

Ua Here Vau Ia Oe

Tamil -

Naan unnai kathalikiraen

Telugu -

Nenu ninnu premistunnanu

Thai -

Chan rak khun (to male)

Thai -

Phom rak khun (to female)

Turkish -

Seni Seviyorum

Ukrainian -

Ya tebe kahayu

Urdu -

mai aap say pyaar karta hoo

Vietnamese -

Anh ye^u em (to female)

Vietnamese -

Em ye^u anh (to male)

Welsh -

'Rwy'n dy garu

Yiddish -

Ikh hob dikh

Yoruba -

Mo ni fe

Zimbabwe -

Ndinokuda

 

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Wordsearch

Valentine's Day Wordsearch

M Y Y T E E W S E L D D I R X
Y A D E R O S N X N J B N K R
V Z N N P R I H Y L G J W N M
U K A H E T A L O C O H C I M
X G C W N I R Y I L I V H P Q
C U O E M U R A F T I D E A W
L L L N Q T B F E M H D L R C
F A S M E O P J P H J I A T X
V C A O V I S U M T K P K Y N
H E P R P S L D G E Y U Y V J
Z N V G D Q D Z P O Y C B I W
U J T Y D M O M M J A O I T A
R A N A F R K Q T R I V D D Y
N K P F A A B R D Z M Y W I A

Candy
Card
Chocolate
Cupid
Flowers
Friend
Heart
Holiday
Lace
Like
Love
Party
Pink
Poems
Poetry
Red
Riddles
Sweet
Valentine

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Guest Book

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January 08

I Love You

 
 
 

The Perfect Gift

 

© By Craig L. Combs

The Perfect Gift

I worship you sweetheart and there is nothing I want more;
Than to find the perfect gift and watch your emotions soar.
Your gratitude compels me to take your breath away;
With a Valentine offering, that puts my heart on display.


Each year has been so special and with this I must recall;
The time you screamed with joy and the year I made you bawl.
A jewelry box you requested and with this the search began;
Average is not for you, so with this I devised a plan.


A trip down to Bass Pro Shops could surely do no harm;
A double-decker tackle box turned out to be the charm.
A fur coat you had mentioned because they are so soft;
You had two coats already, so the mink idea I scoffed.


I topped myself once more; I could tell that you were thrilled;
A live Chinchilla you could name, another wish fulfilled.
He bit your lip and made it bleed, when you gave that guy a kiss;
I think you knew he couldn't swim, our new pet we're gonna miss.


I know you love the movies, and Europe has always been a dream;
I wont forget one Valentines Day when I made those brown eyes beam.
You were speechless that special night, one I'll always cherish;
Not many brides can say they own 'Earnest goes to Paris'.


You say you don't deserve my gifts and to you I say 'contraire'.
I will always go the extra mile, no shortcuts will I spare.
A romantic I am and will always be, I know you feel indebted;
All these gifts you've treasured, and none I have regretted.


Each year keeps getting better, your devotion I adore;
Two thousand five's is no different; I love you even more.


Be MY Valentine

 
 
 
 

History Of Valentines Day

 

The History of Valentines day

The eternal lover that gave us the famous word 'Valentine' and

originated the tradition of writing love letters on this day, is believed

to be Bishop Valentine. He was a priest in Rome when, the city was ruled by

'Claudius the Cruel'. Inspite of the fact that Claudius had

Christian conversions and Christian marriages, the Bishop

refused to surrender to Roman Gods and carried on his religious

duties in secret. He was imprisoned for disobedience, but

even in prison he converted the convicts. While he was in prison,

the jailer's daughter became his friend and was loyal to him

through his ordeal. When Claudius came to know that imprisonment

had not broken his enduring Christian spirit, the bishop was executed.

However, on the day of his death Valentine wrote a note to

his friend, 'the jailer's daughter' and signed it - 'From Your Valentine'.

This great man who died for his beliefs, for his enduring love of

the Christian God, was chosen as the patron Saint of lovers. 14th February

has since been celebrated as Valentine's Day. Romantic souls all

over the world have preferred to focus on the romantic twist

of this tale, the story of the man who united lovers in the holy

bond of marriage; a man who loved his jailer's daughter and started

the tradition of writing love notes.

 

 
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