-
stretches the wet
cloth over a
large wooden frame,
called a
tenter (from
Latin tendere 'to stretch'),
leaving it to dry outdoors. The
lengths of wet
cloth were...
- noun that
comes from the past
participle stem "tens-" of the
Latin verb "
tendere",
meaning "to stretch". "Fasciae" is the
Latin term for "of the band" and...
-
polvo (< Lat. pulvis) pó (< Lat. pulv(er)is) dust
tienda (< Lat.
tenda <
tendĕre) loja; negócio; butique; estabelecimento; depósito (< Fr. loge < Frankish...
- tenurial, tenuto,
transcontinental tend-, tens- stretch,
strain Latin tendere (past
participle tensus) ambitendency, attempt, attend, attendee, attent...
-
Middle French tendre (verb form),
meaning to offer. The
Latin root is
tendere (to
stretch out), and the
sense of
tender as an
offer is
related to the...
- pretenden, from Old
French pretendre, from
Latin praetendere : prae-, pre- +
tendere, to extend]." C****ell's
Latin Dictionary, Marchant, J.R.V, & Charles, Joseph...
-
Stenter is
derived from "tenter",
which has its
origins in the
Latin word
tendere,
meaning "to stretch", p****ing
through an
intermediate French stage. The...
- claim, request" tangō, tangere, tetigī, tāctum "to touch, to hit" tendō,
tendere, tetendī, tentum/tēnsum "to stretch"
Although dō, dare, dedī,
datum "to...
-
ARIVED IN THIS
COLENEY BY THE
FIRST FLEET AGED 78 MY
MOTHER REREAD ME
TENDERELY WITH ME SHE TOCK MUCH
PAINES AND WHEN I
ARIVED IN THIS
COELNEY I SOWD...
- tense,
which comes from
Latin tensus, the
perfect p****ive
participle of
tendere, "stretch". In
modern linguistic theory,
tense is
understood as a category...