-
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 littera...
- 840–912)
discusses the use of the
letter t in
plainsong notation as
meaning trahere vel
tenere debere in one of his letters. The mark's
meaning may also be...
- A
train (from Old
French trahiner, from
Latin trahere, "to pull, to draw") is a
series of
connected vehicles that run
along a
railway track and transport...
-
acostar "to put to bed"
levare llevar "to remove; wake up"
llevar "to take"
trahere traure "to remove"
traer "to bring"
circare cercar "to search"
cercar "to...
- In geometry, a
tractrix (from
Latin trahere 'to pull, drag'; plural: tractrices) is the
curve along which an
object moves,
under the
influence of friction...
-
pectoris tuber elisus, cui
multae moriendi causae etiam citra crucem fuerant,
trahere animam tot
tormenta tracturam?" –
Letter 101, 12–14)
Titus Maccius Plautus...
-
Alexander ei acquiesceret, hoc
advertens regina et dolens,
coepit Aristotelem trahere ad
amorem suum, quia
multociens sola
transibat ****
pedibus nudis et dissoluto...
- root of the verb is
Latin tractare ('manage, handle'), a
frequentative of
trahere ('pull, draw'): in
ancient times, for example,
Latins used the expression...
- in Latin, in a cross-shaped inscription:
Duritiam cordis vestris, saxa
trahere meruistis,
which means "You
deserved to drag
stones due to the hardness...
- facere/facio/faciēbam), bere/bevo/bevevo (bibere/bibo/bibēbam), trarre/traggo/traevo (
trahere/traho/trahēbam), durre/duco/ducevo[obs.] (dūcere/dūco/dūcēbam) and all...