As the Middle English "ani thing", at least 1,000 years.
No! The word Wales comes from the old germanic word for foreign/alien
Yes, "anything" is one word.
The luhya word for the English word anything is "kitu chochote."
Ope isn't short for anything in old English - It's a pseudo-word and is found exclusively in modern second-rate verses, where it means "open." The word did not exist back in the time when people spoke Old English.
The word 'anything' is an indefinite pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for any unnamed or unknown thing. Example:Anything you can do will be appreciated.The word 'anything' is also an adverb, a word that modifies a verb. Example:We're not doing anything, mom.
Desperate is the word that means willing to do anything.
No, anything is a pronoun.
The word for hatred of anything new is neophobia.
There is an old French word from the 13th Century 'golfe' meaning a 'gulf or whirlpool' which was adopted from old Italian, in turn adopted from the Greek language 'kolpos'. The common translation of kolpos means anything with a curved shape
The word is interior.
There are three syllables in the word "anything." (N - E - THING)
It is just how you spelled it, "anything."