A humorous appellation, the word 'Cocaigne' referred to all of London and its suburbs, and over time had a number of spellings: Cocagne, Cockayne, and in Middle English, Cocknay and Cockney. used in: The Angel of the Odd coir A stiff coarse fiber from the outer husk of a coconut....
If a trade deal is to be honest and fair, it should finish up with a mutual benefit for each party. 如果交易诚实公平,最终双方都会获利。 N natural[?n?t??r?l]adj.自然的,天然的 Each nation is endowed with certain natural resources, some of which can be developed for the benefit of t...
early 15c.,surloine,shurleyne,surloyne, a cut of beef, from 16c. identified specifically as the upper part of the loin, from Frenchsurlonge, literally "upper part of the loin," fromsur"over, above" (seesur-) +longe"loin," from Old Frenchloigne(seeloin). ...
In Fig. 1 the tances are more qp-reoxbpaobnleenfotirallafrugnecrtqiovna,lueqe(s−. Txh),eirsepfolorettmedofroerddeivffiearteionnt values of q. It of q from one is is obvious that larger dis- equivalent to existence of larger distances which corresponds to the higher ...
The sham stimulation procedure corresponded to the one described above except that the current was applied only briefly (30 s) at the beginning and the end of the session: during the first and last 30 s of the 15-min tDCS session, an electric pulse of a triangular shape with a maximum ...
In a general sense, every language change exists rienceremateirogneHnoDft HODOHDHODOHDHO grammar and in emergent language, as variation, change and malleability are inherent to the everyday TEMTEPMPTEMT language functioning. FUT †† conctoexnttse,xatns,daanldsoalrseoflreecftlethctetchuemcu...
paed- (G) child (paedognesis) palin- (G) again, back (palingenesis) palae, pale(o)- (G) old, ancient (paleontology, paleocene) palli(um)- mantle pallid- pale palp – L – a feeler (palpitate) palustri- in marshes pan, pant- (G) all panspermy, pangenesis, panthothenic)...
loin(n.) early 14c., "side of the body of an animal used for food;" late 14c., "side of the lower torso of a human body," from Old Frenchloigne"hip, haunch, lumbar region," from Vulgar Latin*lumbea, from*lumbea caro"meat of the loin," from fem. of*lumbeus, from Latinlumbu...