- more
portable it is said to be. The term "port" is
derived from the
Latin portāre,
meaning "to carry". When code is not
compatible with a
particular operating...
-
Portato ([porˈtaːto];
Italian past
participle of
portare, "to carry"), also mezzo-staccato,
French notes portées, in
music denotes a smooth,
pulsing articulation...
- the Gr****
prefix tele- (meaning "remote") to the root of the
Latin verb
portare (meaning "to carry"). Fort's
first formal use of the word
occurred in the...
- portàvem portàveu
portaven Preterite (archaic) portí
portares portà portàrem portàreu
portaren ****ure
portaré portaràs portarà
portarem portareu portaran Conditional...
-
Regina caeli, laetare, alleluia; Quia quem
meruisti portare, alleluia, Resurrexit,
sicut dixit, alleluia: Ora pro
nobis Deum, alleluia.
Queen of heaven...
- Portuguese,
morir ("[to] die") in Spanish,
manger ("[to] eat") in French,
portare ("[to] carry") in
Latin and Italian,
lieben ("[to] love") in German, читать...
- reads:
DIFFICILIS QVONDAM DOMINIS PARERE SERENIS IVSSVS ET
EXTINCTIS PALMAM PORTARE TYRANNIS OMNIA THEODOSIO CEDVNT SVBOLIQVE PERENNI TER
DENIS SIC VICTVS...
-
Canzoni (in Italian).
Retrieved 22
August 2023. "I The
Kolors pronti a
portare "Italodisco" in Europa. Stash: "Mi
avevano proposta la
carriera solista...
- (backpack) or on
their heads. The word "porter"
derives from the
Latin portare (to carry). The use of
humans to
transport cargo dates to the
ancient world...
- A
portative organ (from the
Latin verb
portare, "to carry"), also
known during Italian Trecento as the organetto, is a
small pipe
organ that consists...