- (3) regō,
regere "to rule" and capiō,
capere "to capture", (4) audiō,
audīre "to hear". (3rd
conjugation verbs ending in -iō such as capiō are sometimes...
-
Audiology (from
Latin audīre, "to hear"; and from Gr****
branch of
learning -λογία, -logia) is a
branch of
science that
studies hearing, balance, and related...
- "Hark!" or "hear",
which is "Audi" in the
singular imperative form of "
audire" – "to listen" – in Latin. The idea was
enthusiastically accepted by everyone...
-
practices as the "Audit Society". The word "audit"
derives from the
Latin word
audire which means "to hear".
Auditing has been a sa****uard
measure since ancient...
-
means 'hark' or 'hear',
which is audi in the
singular imperative form of
audire—'to listen'—in Latin. The idea was
enthusiastically accepted by everyone...
- -ere, -ī: dūcere, "to lead", ūtī, "to use"; of the
fourth by -ī-re, -ī-rī:
audīre, "to hear", experīrī, "to attempt". The stem
categories descend from Indo-European...
- An
audiophile (from Latin:
audīre, lit. 'to hear' + Gr****: φίλος, romanized: philos, lit. 'loving') is a
person who is
enthusiastic about high-fidelity...
-
Audiometry (from
Latin audīre 'to hear' and metria 'to measure') is a
branch of
audiology and the
science of
measuring hearing acuity for
variations in...
- take possession". The
title also
resembles two
forms of the
Latin verb
audire ("to hear"):
audiemus ("we
shall hear") and
audiamus ("let us hear"), although...
- The Way of the
World contains two
Latin quotations from Horace's Satires:
Audire est operæ pretium,
procedere recte Qui mæchis non vultis.—Hor. Sat. i. 2...