- the
Latin word
mansio "dwelling", an
abstract noun
derived from the verb
manere "to dwell". The
English word
manse originally defined a
property large enough...
- traditions.
Ultimately derived from the
Latin mansus, "dwelling", from
manere, "to remain", by the 16th
century the term
meant both a
dwelling and, in...
- p. 412.
Humanum fuit errare, diaboli**** est per
animositatem in
errore manere. "University of
Minnesota Style Manual:
Correct Usage". .umn.edu. 2010-11-22...
- a
mansio (from the
Latin word mansus, the
perfect p****ive
participle of
manere "to remain" or "to stay") was an
official stopping place on a
Roman road...
-
Louis XVI L'Esprit de l'histoire, ou
Lettres d'un père a son fils sur la
manére d'étudier l'histoire (4 vols., 1802),
which reached several editions, the...
- line 72–73: "Ne
neuere yet no
vileynye he
sayde In al his lyf vnto no
manere wight. He was a
verray parfit gentil knyght." The
House of Fame, (1379–1380)...
-
Retrieved 17 May 2014. ODCC 2005, p. Original sin. Non
substantialiter manere concupiscentiam,
sicut corpus aliquod aut spiritum; sed esse affectionem...
- and ****embled unto him many misdoers,
beynge of his clothynge, and, in
manere of insurrection,
wente into the
wodes in that countrie, like as it hadde...
- 1496), also
without a
title page, begins: This
present boke
shewyth the
manere of
hawkynge and huntynge: and also of
diuysynge of Cote armours. It shewyth...
-
parir "to give birth" /ãj̃/ /ã/ free /a/ +
nasal amāre aime amer "to love"
manēre maint maneir,
manoir "to remain" /je/ /e/
palatal + free /a/ *accapāre achieve...