And this is where the Swedish word fartlek (FART-laik) comes in. It literally means ‘speed-play’ and describes a type of athletics training devised in the 1930s in which periods of fast and slow running are intermingled. It has now been adopted into English as a useful to word...
βδεω (bdeo), to fart stealthily בדומה (beduma), "in deadly silence", from דמם (damam), to be still βραβευω (brabeuo), to act as an umpire בריבי (b'rabbi), scholar, from ραββι (rabbi), rabbi or my master. βραδυ...
σ [s]. The Laconian word ... goes back to the Doric appellative *..., which presumably derives from the Proto-Indo-European root *... 'to fart, blow to, break wind', secondarily 'to stink, smell' (cf. Ved. árdhate 's/he breaks wind downwards'; Lat. cerda f....
For nothing is swifter than a word. And [that is why] Homer [says] ‘winged words’. They create [images of] him as the youngest of all [the gods], because the word does not grow old; but they also make him quadrangular on account of the firmness of the true word. They also ...