- food).
Derived in
Italian from trarre,
meaning 'to treat' (from the
Latin tractare/trahere, 'to draw'), its
etymology has also been
linked to the
Latin term...
-
further back to the
Latin word tractatus,
which is a form of the verb
tractare,
meaning "to handle," "to manage," or "to deal with". The
Latin roots suggest...
- τράγος (trágos) tragedy, tragic,
tragus trah-, tract- draw, pull
Latin tractare,
frequentative of trahere,
tractus abstract, attract, contract, detract...
-
someone to
something (for instance, a meal). The root of the verb is
Latin tractare ('manage, handle'), a
frequentative of
trahere ('pull, draw'): in ancient...
- Non ego
virgineos iubeo cognoscere ludos nec
teneras tractare genas aut
dulcia nuptis oscula conferre et
tenues astringere mammas, non
liquidum captare...
- τράγος (trágos) tragedy, tragic,
tragus trah-, tract- draw, pull
Latin tractare,
frequentative of trahere,
tractus abstract, attract, contract, detract...
-
exercitatorum usum coposita, quo
certa rationesancta Scriptura syn cere
tractare possint (The
Method of Denuoiam:
Corrected and
integrated into the prin****l...
- Clivisauri, ut
liberius et
securius ibi
possent de
successoris electione tractare, ipse ****
quibusdam aliis apud
basilicam Constantinianam voluit decessoris...