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.
Desperate is the word that means willing to do anything.
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.
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."