-
Lusophone countries. In Spanish,
cocido is the past
participle of the verb
cocer ("to boil"), so it
literally means "boiled [thing]". In Portuguese, the...
- fox5atlanta.com/news/south-fulton-leaders-declare-racism-a-public-health-
cocer "Well-respected
metro police chief said mayor's
accusation of wrongdoing...
- 'castrated animal'), 업진
eobjin (from ebchigün 'chest of an animal'); Old
English cocer (from köküür 'container'); Old
French quivre (from köküür 'container');...
- kumpiská
confiscar to confiscate; to
seize to confiscate; to
seize kusí
cocer to cook to cook labá
lavar to wash to wash legalisá
legalizar to legalize...
-
Colombia has
seseo (the lack of
distinction between /θ/ and /s/),
making cocer/coser or abrazar/abrasar homophones.
Though seseo is
general in Colombia...
- is fried. The
etymology of the word
comes from the
participle of
verbs cocer -to cook or boil- (latín
coctum > cocho, from
which derives the element...
- 15
caracol snail *suni 16
caramba interjection *anaj 17 casa
house *u 18
cocer cook (tr.) *bja 19
cocerse cook (intr.) *wad 20 colibrí
hummingbird *sud...
-
replaced by a
synonym or
derived form—e.g. caza
replaced by cacería, or
cocer ('to boil'),
homophonic with
coser ('to sew'),
replaced by cocinar. For...
-
hacer and
derived verbs), -ecer (except
mecer and remecer), -ocer (except
cocer and
derived verbs), and -ucir. For example: nacer: yo nazco, tú naces.....
-
amdari algodón
cotton tamdari,
andare comida food
datuam crudo raw
daisio cocer to cook quinejua,
esquino vino wine ****g
catatesaqua manteca butter augstari...