uncontracted

  • 71Wikipedia:Manual of Style — This guideline is a part of the English Wikipedia s Manual of Style. Use common sense in applying it; it will have occasional exceptions. Please ensure that any edits to this page reflect consensus. Shortcuts …

    Wikipedia

  • 72Mountbatten Brailler — The Mountbatten Brailler is an electronic machine used to write braille. The Mountbatten incorporates the traditional braille typewriter keyboard of the Perkins Brailler with modern technology, giving it a number of additional features such as… …

    Wikipedia

  • 73Torquil — m Scottish: Anglicized form of the traditional Gaelic name Torcall, originally a borrowing of the Old Norse personal name Ṗorketill (see TORKEL (SEE Torkel)). The earlier uncontracted form of the Gaelic name is preserved in the surname Mac… …

    First names dictionary

  • 74prudent — [14] Prudent and provident are as it were two separate goes at the same word. Both were formed from the Latin prefix prō ‘before, prune 400 in advance’ and vidēns, the present participle of vidēre ‘see’ (and hence etymologically mean… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • 75broad — a. 1. Wide. 2. Large, ample, extensive, expanded, extended, vast, wide reaching, spacious, capacious. 3. Liberal, uncontracted, large, large minded, enlarged, hospitable, tolerant, free from narrowness. 4. Spread, diffused, open. 5. Gross,… …

    New dictionary of synonyms

  • 76ā̆ier-, ā̆ien- —     ā̆ier , ā̆ien     English meaning: day, morning     Deutsche Übersetzung: “Tag, Morgen”     Grammatical information: n.     Note: Root ü̆ier , ü̆ien : “day, morning” derived from a reduced Root ü̆ĝher , ü̆ĝhen , ü̆ĝhes (oder ōĝ her… …

    Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary

  • 77prudent — [14] Prudent and provident are as it were two separate goes at the same word. Both were formed from the Latin prefix prō ‘before, in advance’ and vidēns, the present participle of vidēre ‘see’ (and hence etymologically mean ‘foreseeing’). The pre …

    Word origins

  • 78AKKADIAN LANGUAGE — Akkadian is the designation for a group of closely related East Semitic dialects current in Mesopotamia from the early third millennium until the Christian era. Closely connected to it is Eblaite, the language found at Tell Maradikh (ancient… …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism