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poornesses, popeless, populousness, populousnesses, portless, portress, portresses, positiveness, positivenesses, posse, posses, possess, possessed, possesses, possessing, possession, possessions, possessive, possessiveness, possessivenesses, possessives, possessor. possessors, posset, possets, possibilitie...
Martin, who was a man of few words and possessed but little power of eloquence or persuasion, submitted to this operation with a very calm and agreeable expression of countenance, for some seconds; finding, however, that it threatened speedily to lead to a result which would place it beyond...
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Middle English vocabulary and Modern English vocabulary. We also use it to refer to all the words of a given dialect, a given book, a given discipline and the words possessed by an individual person. English is one of the world's highly developed languages. Naturally the vocabulary is one ...
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Celestine Dessike Have you ever thought about having the power to make your man sexually hungry for you by simply speaking a few words? Yes, I know how it sounds... Very empowering isn't it? Can you imagine him being possessed by visceral feelings of lus
Sense of "possess, have at one's disposal" (I have a book) is a shift from older languages, where the thing possessed was made the subject and the possessor took the dative case (as in Latinest mihi liber"I have a book," literally "there is to me a book"). Used as an auxiliary...
1) Possessor + Possessed, e.g. Jane’s doll; Peter’s hand; John’s sister. The three constructions illustrate two types of possession: alienable (Jane’s doll) and inalienable (Peter’s hands; John’s sister;) 2) Carrier + Attribute, e.g. Mary’s vanity; 3) Agent + Process, e....
mean(adj.1) c. 1200,mēne, "shared by all, common, general," a sense now obsolete, shortened fromimene, from Old Englishgemæne"common, public, general, universal, shared by all," from Proto-Germanic*ga-mainiz"possessed jointly" (source also of Old Frisianmene, Old Saxongimeni, Midd...