Definitions Sorry, no definitions found. Check out and contribute to thediscussionof this word! Etymologies Sorry, no etymologies found.
come to pass : happen Many of the things he predicted have come to pass. come to terms 1 : to reach an agreement often used with with The company has come to terms with the union. 2 : to become adjusted especially emotionally or intellectually usually used with with come to terms...
To pass (something) on or upon (some one), to put upon as a trick or cheat; to palm off. ``She passed the child on her husband for a boy.' --Dryden. To pass over, to overlook; not to note or resent; as, to pass over an affront. Meaning of To pass by from wikipedia - ...
First Known Use Verb before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at intransitive sense 1a Noun 1923, in the meaning defined at sense 1 Time Traveler The first known use of come was before the 12th century See more words from the same century Phrases...
One can be said to cleave a block of wood, meaningto split it, or tocleaveto one’s principles, meaning tocling to them. 03 hew “hew”一词既可以表示“砍,劈(大的物体)”,也可以表示“遵从,坚持”。 When a lumberjackhewsa tree, he iscutting it down, but a politician whohewsto a pa...
the meanest men in th the meaning and end o the meaning to the measures of incre the mechanical analys the mechanical proper the mechanism of rule the mechanisms involv the medical insurance the medici at san lor the medusa touch the meeting of the the meeting was sched the memories are si...
theres no easy way it theres no meaning theres no perfect way theres no point wasti theres no risk of sth theres no scope for o theres nothing in the theres nothing like a theres one more thing theres so much in lif theres someone i wish theres something i ha theres something wron there...
mean/mi:n/a.平均的n.平均值 meaning/‘mi:niŋ/n.意义,意思;意图 means/mi:nz/n.方法,手段,工具 meantime/‘mi:n’taim/n.其时,其间ad.当时 meanwhile/‘mi:n’wail/ad.同时,当时 measure/‘meʒə/vt.量,测量n.分量 measurement/‘meʒəmənt/n.衡量,测量;尺寸 meat/mi:t/n.肉 ...
. Another Middle English sense was "to peer over the top of, survey from on high, view from a high place" (c. 1400). These two literal senses have given rise to the two main modern meanings. The meaning "to look over or beyond and thus fail to see" (hence "to pass over ...
in loanwords from Latin, meaning “after, subsequent to,”“behind, at the rear or end of” (postaxial; postmeridian; postpone; postscript); in English esp. productive in the formation of adjectives or adjective derivatives that specify a period of time following the event, phenomena, period...