repugnant
The answer is true.No. Modern English is only somewhat inflected, and uses word order to establish most grammatical relationships.
Old English/Middle-English/Early Modern English/Modern English
In Latin, the English word "City" would be "Urbs," which could possibly be where we get our modern day English word "Urban" from. The Latin word for the English word "Jewel" would probably be "Gemma," from which we get the English word "Gem." So it might be something like "Urbs de Gemmae." I'm not 100% positive on this, but it's a start! ~Boogie~
The 1611 King James Version of the Bible was written in Early Modern English, which is a predecessor to the modern English language that we use today. It was not written in Old English, Middle English, or Modern English, but rather a distinct stage of the English language.
well, you can say, "Apakah nama kamu?" this would be the formal way. or you can say it how normal every day malaysians say it, "Nama kau apa?" "Kau siapa?" (this one would be on the rude side though, so i wouldn't recommend it). "Apa nama kau?"
εζ (GenryΕ)
Hello? Topcoat is a Modern English word.
"Nama" has many meanings, among them: raw, inexperienced, and in the case of beer, "draft."
The word I is already in modern English.
the answer is : "what is your name"
The phrase 'my name is' in Indonesian is: 'nama saya'. In slang language, a teenager would say 'nama gue'.
The word since existed in Early Modern English.
The modern English word for "thee" is you. Thee and thou are used the same way as our modern you and your.
you
The cast of Nama nama nama nama Dauntaun - 1992 includes: Masatoshi Hamada as himself Hitoshi Matsumoto as himself
the word beseech is modern English, albeit a little irregular for colloquial speech.Any of the following are acceptable synonyms:begimploreentreatsupplicateprayplead