kiamlaluno's Profile

11
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Questions
6

Answers
305

  • Asked on August 22, 2021 in Meaning.

    As adjective, the NOAD defines yearling as having lived or existed for a year; a year old.
    Dictionary. com defines adjective as meaning of a year’s duration…

    In recurrent events annual is the word I would use. If you interpret existed for a year as using a relative reference, then yearling could be used to describe the badge.

    • 405431 views
    • 203 answers
    • 149537 votes
  • Asked on August 18, 2021 in Meaning.

    As adjective, the NOAD defines yearling as having lived or existed for a year; a year old.
    Dictionary. com defines adjective as meaning of a year’s duration…

    In recurrent events annual is the word I would use. If you interpret existed for a year as using a relative reference, then yearling could be used to describe the badge.

    • 405431 views
    • 203 answers
    • 149537 votes
  • Asked on August 14, 2021 in Meaning.

    As adjective, the NOAD defines yearling as having lived or existed for a year; a year old.
    Dictionary. com defines adjective as meaning of a year’s duration…

    In recurrent events annual is the word I would use. If you interpret existed for a year as using a relative reference, then yearling could be used to describe the badge.

    • 405431 views
    • 203 answers
    • 149537 votes
  • Asked on August 9, 2021 in Meaning.

    As adjective, the NOAD defines yearling as having lived or existed for a year; a year old.
    Dictionary. com defines adjective as meaning of a year’s duration…

    In recurrent events annual is the word I would use. If you interpret existed for a year as using a relative reference, then yearling could be used to describe the badge.

    • 405431 views
    • 203 answers
    • 149537 votes
  • In Abraham Fleming’s The Diamond of Deuotion, Cut and squared into sixe seuerall points, A Documentary Edition is reported the following sentence:

    Is it possible that the lambe and the woolfe, the spider and the flie, the falcon and the feasant, the hound and the hare, the peacocke and the snake, the cat and the mouse, the owle and the nightingale, the owle and

    At the end of the page there are the following notes:

    176 the iuie and the oke: the ivy and the oak.
    177 Cf. Rabelais, “for it is more their opposition and enemy…than cabbage to vines” (Gargantua et Pantagruel 370).

    What are some examples?

    • 485920 views
    • 615 answers
    • 179588 votes
  • In Abraham Fleming’s The Diamond of Deuotion, Cut and squared into sixe seuerall points, A Documentary Edition is reported the following sentence:

    Is it possible that the lambe and the woolfe, the spider and the flie, the falcon and the feasant, the hound and the hare, the peacocke and the snake, the cat and the mouse, the owle and the nightingale, the owle and

    At the end of the page there are the following notes:

    176 the iuie and the oke: the ivy and the oak.
    177 Cf. Rabelais, “for it is more their opposition and enemy…than cabbage to vines” (Gargantua et Pantagruel 370).

    What are some examples?

    • 485920 views
    • 615 answers
    • 179588 votes
  • In Abraham Fleming’s The Diamond of Deuotion, Cut and squared into sixe seuerall points, A Documentary Edition is reported the following sentence:

    Is it possible that the lambe and the woolfe, the spider and the flie, the falcon and the feasant, the hound and the hare, the peacocke and the snake, the cat and the mouse, the owle and the nightingale, the owle and

    At the end of the page there are the following notes:

    176 the iuie and the oke: the ivy and the oak.
    177 Cf. Rabelais, “for it is more their opposition and enemy…than cabbage to vines” (Gargantua et Pantagruel 370).

    What are some examples?

    • 485920 views
    • 615 answers
    • 179588 votes
  • In Abraham Fleming’s The Diamond of Deuotion, Cut and squared into sixe seuerall points, A Documentary Edition is reported the following sentence:

    Is it possible that the lambe and the woolfe, the spider and the flie, the falcon and the feasant, the hound and the hare, the peacocke and the snake, the cat and the mouse, the owle and the nightingale, the owle and

    At the end of the page there are the following notes:

    176 the iuie and the oke: the ivy and the oak.
    177 Cf. Rabelais, “for it is more their opposition and enemy…than cabbage to vines” (Gargantua et Pantagruel 370).

    What are some examples?

    • 485920 views
    • 615 answers
    • 179588 votes
  • In Abraham Fleming’s The Diamond of Deuotion, Cut and squared into sixe seuerall points, A Documentary Edition is reported the following sentence:

    Is it possible that the lambe and the woolfe, the spider and the flie, the falcon and the feasant, the hound and the hare, the peacocke and the snake, the cat and the mouse, the owle and the nightingale, the owle and

    At the end of the page there are the following notes:

    176 the iuie and the oke: the ivy and the oak.
    177 Cf. Rabelais, “for it is more their opposition and enemy…than cabbage to vines” (Gargantua et Pantagruel 370).

    What are some examples?

    • 485920 views
    • 615 answers
    • 179588 votes
  • In Abraham Fleming’s The Diamond of Deuotion, Cut and squared into sixe seuerall points, A Documentary Edition is reported the following sentence:

    Is it possible that the lambe and the woolfe, the spider and the flie, the falcon and the feasant, the hound and the hare, the peacocke and the snake, the cat and the mouse, the owle and the nightingale, the owle and

    At the end of the page there are the following notes:

    176 the iuie and the oke: the ivy and the oak.
    177 Cf. Rabelais, “for it is more their opposition and enemy…than cabbage to vines” (Gargantua et Pantagruel 370).

    What are some examples?

    • 485920 views
    • 615 answers
    • 179588 votes