- In grammar, a noun is a word that
represents a
concrete or
abstract thing, such as
living creatures, places, actions, qualities,
states of existence, and...
- (1393) or
Vraknye (1459). The name is
probably derived from a Proto-Slavic
appelative *vrakunъ,
potentially reflecting Pre-Christian (pagan) rituals. The stem...
- lit. 'Jewess'),
notably the King
James Version, but the word is an
appelative,
there to
indicate that Pharaoh's
daughter was no
longer a pagan. However...
-
noted for its
growing and
preservation of
Kolanuts that
earns it the
appelative cognomen "Ijare
Elewe Obi" That is, Ijare, the
Kolanut city.
AGAGU ****URES...
- one of the
cities of the
world nicknamed "City of
Eternal Spring". This
appelative derived from
Alexander von Humboldt's
Researches concerning the institutions...
-
settlement of Trubín, with the
addition of -sky
suffix and the
potok appelative. The
naming was
settled in 1976. Trubínsky
potok is
sourced on
lower eastern...
- young". The
ending -ov(a)/-av(a) is a
common Slavic suffix used in
appelatives and
proper names. -ova
denotes ownership,
chiefly of
feminine nouns....
-
northern Slovakia. Rajec, Rajčianka, Rajčanka are
derived from Proto-Slavic
appelative *rajь – a wet,
muddy place (modern
Slovak raj – a paradise, "a
place with...
- Meduna/Meduno (-dun) does not have a
generic meaning of "mountains" and the
Latin appelative mons/montes has not
inherited a
second semantic value of "castle/castles"...