- "singing",
which comes from the
Latin cantus, "song", from the
infinitive verb
canere, "to sing". In Old
Saxon poetry, Old
English poetry, and
Middle English...
-
soplar soprar (a)
sufla (bufar)
sulai /
sulare bufar suflé sciuscià to sing
canere cantare chantar chanter chantar cantare cantar cantar (a) cânta
cantar cantai...
- name from its
first line, "Son of Telamon". Erasmus. Adagia. 3, 4, 10: "
Canere de Telamone". ... the
Telamon would have been a
plaintive song
about the...
-
derived from the
Latin cuculus (the cuckoo) and
canorus (melodious; from
canere,
meaning "to sing"). The
cuckoo family gets its
common name and
genus name...
-
Motacilla cantillans. The
specific cantillans is
Latin for "warbling" from
canere, "to sing". Like most
Curruca species, it has
distinct male and
female plumages...
- (kanṓn) cane, canister, canon,
canonic can-, -cin-, cant-, -cent- sing
Latin canere,
cantus accent, accentual, accentuate, accentuation, canción, canorous,...
- from the
supine stem with -āre added. cantāre, ‘(continue to) sing’ (<
canere, ‘sing a song’). (This
frequentative form was used
often enough that it...
- 23, 2006.
Richard J.
Schuler (1990).
Robert A.
Skeris (ed.). ****
Angelis Canere:
Essays on
Sacred Music and
Pastoral Liturgy in
honour of
Richard J. Schuler...
- Fujian, China. The
specific epithet is
Latin meaning "melodious" (from
canere "to sing"). The
Chinese hwamei is now one of 14
laughingthrushes placed...
-
Energy Commission,
Division of
Technical Information. p. 33. "Il
Genio nella Canere" (PDF). psicoterapia.name (in Italian). p. 186.
Archived from the original...