Ety_13
- semanics
- jugular
- (pronu) dj..-gju-l..r
- a major vein in your neck that carries blood from your head to your heart. ( jugular vein)
- (related)
- ”yoke” <– (iungere <– “to join, to tie together“<– *yeug )
- (figurative.def)
- ”heavy burden, oppression, servitude”
- junction
- joust /J..ust/
- (def)
- (of a medieval knight) engage in a sports contest in which two opponents on horseback fight with lances.
- –> related
- yoga
- juncture /Juc-ture-
- (def)
- ”place where two things are joined”
- ”yoke” <– (iungere <– “to join, to tie together“<– *yeug )
- note (n.)
- ” a song, music, a musical note” <– (l)nota : “letter, character, note” <– “a mark, sign, means of recognition”
- <– (L.) noscere (No.sh@.re) <– * gnoscere “to know.” ( see know )
- (Later.def) notice, attention, reputation
- (BuzzWorthy..DEF)
- ” Know -> to be acquainted or familiar with; to have encountered.”
- ” to distinguish, to discern”
- ” to be able to play or perform “
- ” to be certain of or that.”
- (PIE)
- *ǵneh₃-
- allude to
- accusation
- lamentation
- premise
- reckon
- analogy
- quarreling
- deduce
- proclaim
- dike
- labyrinth
- preliminary
- studios /Stu-/
- wonk <– wonky ( “shaky, unreliable”)
- <– wank, wanker
- extension
- vicious
- (example)
- ”It was vicious; he went for the jugular.”
- appendage
- collarbone
- diminutive
- bony
- contrivance
- draft
- –> “contrivance for fastening a pair of draft animals”
- servitude /ser-vi-tude
- The state of being a slave or completely subject to someone more powerful.
- lance
* new Word :
* means
* (def)
* an agency, instrument, or method used to attain an end. ( end ? )
- new Discovery
- mathematical expectation
- arithmetic mean
- means : (logic) the middle term in a syllogism. (? –> syllogism )
- ( adj )
- factuality
- cognizant
- acquainted
- take part in it
- cognate
<< Alternative interesting >>
- fascinating
- intriguing
- gripping
- alive
- newsworthy
*
proverb
- ” It’s not what you know but who you know.”
(For success, and especially to obtain employment, one’s knowledge and skills are less useful and less important than one’s network of personal contacts) - “know which end is up”
- (example) “When someone doesn’t know which end is up, who knows why they do things.”
- (def) to have a clear understanding of a situation.
– New Grammer –
” a wooden crosspiece that is fastened over the necks of two animals and attached to the plow or cart that they are to pull.”
– be to
– go for (<– went for)
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