What is another word for the couple?

Pronunciation: [ðə kˈʌpə͡l] (IPA)

When referring to a pair of people in a romantic relationship, there are numerous synonyms for the common phrase "the couple." They include expressions such as "the lovebirds," "the duo," "the twosome," "the pair," and "the two of them." Other options include "the sweethearts," "the lovebirds," "the love duo," and "the nesting partners." These phrases can be used interchangeably and are appropriate for both formal and informal contexts. No matter which synonym you choose, it should convey the idea of a loving, mutually supportive relationship between two people who care deeply for one another.

What are the hypernyms for The couple?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Famous quotes with The couple

  • My grandfather taught me generosity. He sold snow cones in Harlem. I went with him at 5 and he let me hand out the change and snow cones. I learned a lot in the couple of years that we did that.
    Erik Estrada
  • I gave the couple a hint of a design that would work great with the bones of their home. They weren't ready for it, and they embarrassed themselves and that's too bad.
    Douglas Wilson
  • The ritual of marriage is not simply a social event; it is a crossing of threads in the fabric of fate. Many strands bring the couple and their families together and spin their lives into a fabric that is woven on their children.
    Portuguese-Jewish Wedding Ceremony
  • There is a beautiful tale among the Australian aborigines which says that the bow and arrow were not man's invention, but an ancestor God turned himself into a bow and his wife became the bowstring, for she constantly has her hands around his neck, as the bowstring embraces the bow. So the couple came down to earth and appeared to a man, revealing themselves as bow and bowstring, and from that the man understood how to construct a bow. The bow ancestor and his wife then disappeared again into a hole in the earth. So man, like an ape, only copied, but did not invent, the bow and arrow. And so the smiths originally, or so it seems from Eliade's rather plausible argument, did not feel that they had invented metallurgy; rather, they learned how to transform metals on the basis of understanding how God made the world.
    Marie-Louise von Franz
  • Marriage is like a table with four legs - the couple, the children, the parents and the in-laws. Break any of these and the marriage crashes to the floor
    Siddharth Katragadda

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