The answer is yes, you are both right. A word can, and usually does have, multiple opposites. In fact any word that has a similar meaning to a word X is in a sense an opposite to X. Difference is opposition, a relation of oppositeness.
Answer from Drew on Stack ExchangeVideos
The answer is yes, you are both right. A word can, and usually does have, multiple opposites. In fact any word that has a similar meaning to a word X is in a sense an opposite to X. Difference is opposition, a relation of oppositeness.
Love is having strong emotions and wanting someone.
In a sense hate is your opposite because it means having strong emotions but not wanting someone.
If you want the opposites rolled into one word I would go with ambivalent which conveys someone you may love and hate.
If you want to travel the other side of the word vector, I would go with indifferent. Meaning you have no emotions towards a person.
I used to think it was hatred. So I thought the world hated me because no one loved me. No one ever gave a chance to me.
But then I had an epiphany and realised the opposite of love wasn't hatred it was indifference. The world or anyone really didn't hate me I was just another nameless NPC to them. After this I felt a little better and bad at the same time. Because while no one hated me it also meant my suffering and pain was quite worthless.
I’ve heard this several times before, and it is nonsense. It’s basically like saying, “The opposite of hot isn’t cold. It’s lukewarmness.” You could say the opposite of passionate feeling, negative or positive, is indifference, but it isn’t the opposite of love.