- manner, such as
engaging in combat. The term
comes from the
Latin bellum gerere ("to wage war").
Unlike the use of
belligerent as an
adjective meaning "aggressive"...
-
deputy of a
ruler or head of state: vice (Latin for "in
place of") and
gerere (Latin for "to
carry on, conduct"). In
Oxford colleges, a
vicegerent is...
- and
other organisations. The term
means key
holder derived from
clavis +
gerere (key + to carry). The
office was
retained in many
localities in England...
- this
species Scutigera coleoptrata. The word
scutigera comes from
Latin gerere 'to bear' and
scutum 'shield',
because of the
shape of the
plates in the...
-
Edward Coke observes) and he only, is said
vicem seu
personam ecclesiae gerere ("to
carry out the
business of the
church in person") — Bl. Comm. I.11.V...
-
Ancient Roman etymologists thought that
ceres derived from the
Latin verb
gerere, "to bear,
bring forth, produce",
because the
goddess was
linked to pastoral...
- from the
Latin word
verbum (also the
source of verbiage), plus the verb
gerĕre, to
carry on or conduct, from
which the
Latin verb verbigerāre, to talk...
-
ductum "to lead" flectō, flectere, flexī,
flexum "to bend, to twist" gerō,
gerere, gessī,
gestum "to wear, to bear; wage (war)" mittō, mittere, mīsī, missum...
- est
canini capitis homines.
Divulgant apud hostes, hos
pertinaciter bella gerere,
humanum sanguinem bibere et, si
hostem adsequi non-possint,
proprium potare...
- govern") a
synonym of
viceroy a
common misuse of
vicegerent (from
Latin gerere, "to carry", "to manage", "to govern") This
disambiguation page
lists articles...