- the sca****
forward around the thorax. The
muscle is
named from Latin:
serrare = to saw (referring to the shape); and
anterior = on the
front side of...
- [ɔ] and [uː] of Latin, respectively.: 36–37
Consonantal degemination:
SERRARE > saré.
Latin groups of
occlusives [kt] and [gd]
become [jd]-, as in Gallo-Romance:...
-
creep Latin serpere,
serptus serpent serr- saw, saw-toothed
Latin serra,
serrare biserrate, serrate, serration, serrature, serriform, serrulate, sierra...
-
creep Latin serpere,
serptus serpent serr- saw, saw-toothed
Latin serra,
serrare biserrate, serrate, serration, serrature, serriform, serrulate, sierra...
-
rolling hills or cerrales".
Other sources say it
comes from the
Latin serrare, in the
sense of an
enclosed area,
fenced or
cordoned off. In the moors...
- the
first book of poetry,
which was
published in Istanbul,
followed by
Şerrare in 1884. On
November 23, 1885, İmâdü'l-in Midâd (Peasant
Girls Songs) poem...
- as its
specific epithet,
nigroserratus (a
Latin niger for "black", and
serrare meaning "to saw").
Slightly posterior to this point, it
splits completely...