-
endings from the
imperfect of
Latin habēre, (Sicilian/Provençal type), e.g.
cantarìa (literally from 'he was
having to sing'); one
derived directly from Latin...
-
imperfect or
preterite of habeō (*cantāre habēbam > *cantáre aía > Sp.
cantaría). Its
meaning has
shifted to that of a ****ure
subjunctive in
Spanish and...
-
Archived from the
original on 20
August 2008.
Retrieved 21
September 2008.
Cantaria: Contemporary:
Fields of
Athenry Archived 16
February 2016 at the Wayback...
- (1821).
Scottish Minstrel. Graham,
George Farquhar (1850).
Scottish Songs. "
Cantaria: Traditional: Wild
Mountain Thyme". Chivalry.
Retrieved 23
January 2008...
- (2004)
various pages Haswell-Smith (2004) pp. 207–209 "Mingulay Boat Song"
Cantaria.
Retrieved 26
December 2006. Haswell-Smith (2004) pp. 282–83
Thompson (1968)...
-
cantara cantarei cantaria 2nd
cantas cantaste cantavas cantaras cantarás
cantarias 3rd
canta cantou cantava cantara cantará
cantaria plural 1st cantamos...
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cantarei (simple), eu vou
cantar (compound, ir + infinitive) conditional: eu
cantaria (simple), eu iria/ia
cantar (compound, ir + infinitive) past perfect: eu...
-
chanter and from the
Latin cantare (to sing). Its
medieval derivative cantaria means "licence to sing m****". The
French term for this
commemorative institution...
-
between the now-standard -ía, and -íe and -ié (i.e. tenía, teníe, tenié,
cantaría, cantaríe, cantarié 'I had, I
would sing') in
writing up
until the end...
- for the TV show
Black Sails. "The
Ballad of
Captain Kidd (traditional)".
Cantaria Folk Song Archive.
Archived from the
original on 8 May 2014. Kidd, David...