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  2. Passionate and companionate love - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passionate_and...

    Obsessive love disorder – Excessive desire to possess and protect another person; Passion (emotion) – Feeling of intense enthusiasm towards or compelling desire for someone or something; Romance (love) – Type of love that focuses on feelings; Storge – Familial love, natural or instinctual affection to one such as a family member

  3. Passion (emotion) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passion_(emotion)

    Passion and desire go hand in hand, especially as a motivation. Linstead & Brewis refer to Merriam-Webster to say that passion is an "intense, driving, or overmastering feeling or conviction". This suggests that passion is a very intense emotion, but can be positive or negative. Negatively, it may be unpleasant at times.

  4. Emotion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotion

    Feeling: not all feelings include emotion, such as the feeling of knowing. In the context of emotion, feelings are best understood as a subjective representation of emotions, private to the individual experiencing them. Emotions are often described as the raw, instinctive responses, while feelings involve our interpretation and awareness of ...

  5. Why do some people give human feelings to inanimate ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/why-people-human-feelings-inanimate...

    Sometimes, the feelings are attached to objects that a person has had for a while and now finds to be sentimental or nostalgic, reminding them of a different time in their life, said Kim Egel, a ...

  6. Emotion classification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotion_classification

    Researchers distinguish several emotion dynamics, most commonly how intense (mean level), variable (fluctuations), inert (temporal dependency), instable (magnitude of moment-to-moment fluctuations), or differentiated someone's emotions are (the specificity of granularity of emotions), and whether and how an emotion augments or blunts other ...

  7. 'Inside Out 2' adds the new emotion Anxiety. Why that's ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/entertainment/inside-2-adds-emotion...

    Between ages 7 and 10, the speed in which they can label emotions and identify less intense feelings improves noticeably. So it makes sense developmentally that as Riley gets older, and is now 13 ...

  8. Group emotion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group_emotion

    The reassurance of belonging to a crowd makes people act more extremely. Also, the intense uniformity of feelings is overwhelming and causes people to be emotionally swept to join the group's atmosphere. Thus, the effect of the group causes emotions to be exaggerated. [1]

  9. Emotions and culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotions_and_culture

    Hochschild [26] discusses the role of feeling rules, which are social norms that prescribe how people should feel in different situations. These rules can be general (how people should express emotions overall) and also situational (how people should express emotions during specific events).