In Progress Finder features I'm working on. Phonograms searching coming soon due to many users searching such as "words ending with a multiple phonogram" Root word search. Show with prefix and suffix options, only if it has a root word. Alternative spelling of words from American English to...
Perhaps it’s because Tobit is included in the Bible for only some denominations, but not in others.) So to sum up, angels flash in, say their piece, and are gone before anybody figures out what-all just happened or who that was. You never know when reminders of angels might come alo...
ending noun the end of a word (a suffix or inflectional ending or final morpheme) endless adjective tiresomely long; seemingly without end endurance noun the power to withstand hardship or stress enemy noun an opposing military force energetic adjective possessing or exerting or displaying energy ene...
stop noun the event of something ending storage noun the act of storing something storm noun a violent weather condition with winds 64-72 knots (11 on the Beaufort scale) and precipitation and thunder and lightning strain noun (physics) deformation of a physical body under the action of applied...
Ending Endless Endnote Endocrine Endorphin Endorse Endowment Endpoint Endurable Endurance Enduring Energetic Energize Energy Enforced Enforcer Engaged Engaging Engine Engorge Engraved Engraver Engraving Engross Engulf Enhance Enigmatic Enjoyable Enjoyably Enjoyer Enjoying Enjoyment Enlarged Enlarging Enlighten Enlisted...
1A. Apparently, the more complexity there is in the phonological repre- sentation of the suffix, the more perceptually salient it is in the derived word and the less biased readers are towards using the properties of the complex word as a whole as processing cues. There was no main effect...
5 For instance, when the pro-ductive suffix -er is attached to trochaic place names ending in -en [ən] to derive a demonym to the place name, elision of a reduced syllable is common in cer-tain dialects. The elision of a reduced syllable in these dialects is probably motivated by ...
Some authors say that a period of about forty days, beginning three weeks before the annual Sun-Sirius conjunction and ending three weeks after, constituted the ‘dog days’. “They called the period from July 3 to August 11, ‘caniculares dies’–‘the Dog Days’” []. Allen in Star ...
Ending Endless Endnote Endocrine Endorphin Endorse Endowment Endpoint Endurable Endurance Enduring Energetic Energize Energy Enforced Enforcer Engaged Engaging Engine Engorge Engraved Engraver Engraving Engross Engulf Enhance Enigmatic Enjoyable Enjoyably Enjoyer Enjoying Enjoyment Enlarged Enlarging Enlighten Enlisted...
Ende: 1. end, ending Endivie: 1. endive Endung: 1. end, terminate Energie: 1. energy Enge: 1. narrow space Engel: 1. angel Engelwurz: 1. angelica England: 1. England | 2. England Englisch: 1. English, English language Engländer: 1. Englishman, Sassenach Engländerin: 1. Engli...