- love", (2) videō, vidēre "to see", (3) regō,
regere "to rule" and capiō,
capere "to capture", (4) audiō, audīre "to hear". (3rd
conjugation verbs ending...
-
liberating a
child from
parental authority)
which in turn
stems from ē manu
capere (capture from
someone else's hand).
Abolitionism Catholic eman****tion Dunmore's...
- data as "given".
Peter Checkland introduced the term
capta (from the
Latin capere, "to take") to
distinguish between an
immense number of
possible data and...
-
Brisson in 1760.
Muscicapa comes from the
Latin musca meaning a fly, and
capere to catch. In 1910, the
German ornithologist Ernst Hartert found it impossible...
- cabestan, from
capestre "pulley cord," from
Latin capistrum, -a halter, from
capere, to take hold of,
seems to have come into
English (14th century) from Portuguese...
- In
Roman law, man****tio (f.
Latin m****, "hand"; and
capere, "to take hold of") was a
solemn verbal contract by
which the
ownership of
certain types of...
-
English have,
comes from PIE *kh₂pyé- 'to grasp', and has the
Latin cognate capere 'to seize, grasp, capture'. Habēre, on the
other hand, is from PIE *gʰabʰ...
- was
shortened to just "cop". It may also find its
origin in the
Latin capere,
brought to
English via the Old
French caper. The
responsibilities of a...
- vs. ten; pēdis vs. foot; quid vs. what For PIE k:
centum vs. hund(red);
capere "to take" vs. have For PIE kʷ: quid vs. what; quandō vs. when
Various further...
- Muscicapidae. The word
Muscicapa comes from the
Latin musca, a fly and
capere, to catch. The
specific dauurica refers to Dauria, an area of south-eastern...