No, if you ran the same process in reverse you'd get all these synonyms:

love, like, affection, adore, dear, darling, charity, friendship, fondness, desire, lust, nothing

French has even less differentiation, with aimer being both 'love' and 'like'.

C.S. Lewis wrote a study (a whole book, I think?) called The Three Loves on different concepts present in Greek words: eros the erotic love, philia 'affection, liking, friendship, bond', storge... I can't remember what storge is.

But we are ill-equipped with words in the area and it does make for confusion.

We could usefully distinguish affections for persons based on the hormones involved. The sex hormones testosterone and IIRC oestrogen dominate in the process of desire/lust. The mood hormones like serotonin dominate in "being in love", the happiness when with the loved one and anxiety when apart. And the bonding/maternal/orgasm hormones oxytocin and vasopressin dominate the calm, long-term security yu feel with someone. So I have proposed testolove, serolove, and oxylove. And of course they can overlap.