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She has rather an infectious laugh that affects all of us during parties.
If you mean the gang. Yes they are still around and are a very active gang in the US.
If you mean the Filipino heroine of WW2, she was sick of leprosy and was granted visa to get treatment in the US. She was confined in the hospital in Carville, Louisiana.
We need to breathe oxygen to live.He kept telling me to breathe easy. I'd like to see him breathing easy while giving birth.The oxygen tanks allow us to breathe underwater for a while.
If you mean infectuous disease. The most common deadly disease in the US in the early 1900s was probably tuberculosis. In the last half of the 1900s it was probably Influenza (the flu). If you mean any disease, then I think it would be heart disease for the entire century.
There is no suffix in Deum Deus. If you mean the ending of Deus, then the complete "suffix" (rather ending) is -us, not -s. And the -us indicates the word is a nominative. The nominative in Latin grammar is the subject of the sentence.Here is Deus completely declined in the singular:Nominative: DeusGenitive: DeiDative: DeoAccusative: DeumAblative: Deo
Is the word you're taking the prefix and suffix away from "indispensable"? If so, then the word minus the prefix and suffix would be "dispense", which means to give away/get rid of. If something or someone is "indispensable" on the other hand, then you can't do without them because they are important.
No, the suffix -us does not mean "pertaining to" in medical terminology. It is a common ending for various medical terms but does not have a specific meaning on its own.
The adverb form of occasion is occasionally.In English, most adverbs, but not all of them, have the suffix -ly. Adding this suffix to the word "occasion" gave us the adverb, "occasionally".
Anyone that could answer this question i would very much appreciate it!! Jordan Colella US
The main difference between the internet domain suffix TW and the domain suffix US is geographical location. TW is the domain suffix used for websites in Taiwan, and the US domain suffix is used for websites in the United States.
because ium is a scientific word for elementIt is a Latin word suffix for nouns identifying their syntactic place in a sentence. Another Latin word suffix is us. One means subject and the other means object of sentence, but I can't remember which is which right now.
Usefully, usefulness.
If you mean "US" as in USA, it is "Estados Unidos". If you mean "US" as in you and me, then the word is "nosotros".
The suffix "-US" comes from Latin, and denotes masculine gender, nominative case, and singular number. That is, it takes a part of a word and converts it into a masculine singular noun. For example, in the word "BONUS", "BON-" means "good", so "BONUS" is a good thing. Another example is "LOCUS". The root "LOC-" means "place", as in "location" or "allocate". So "LOCUS" literally means "The place".The suffix "-US" is different from the suffix "-OUS", which actually takes a word and converts it into an adjective, such as "JOY" to "JOYOUS".Some words, like "Hummus", are not counterexamples because "hummus" is not the fusion of "HUMM-" and "-US". "Humm" has no meaning on its own.Try again. -us is not an English ending. It is Latin, and it is found on masculine, feminine and neuter nouns (e.g. carrus, manus and genus, respectively). Generally it indicates the nominative, but in some 3rd declension nouns like senatus -us, it is also the genitive, and of course neuter nominatives and accusatives are always the same.If you meant -ous, then the second paragraph above is correct.
The suffix "-US" comes from Latin, and denotes masculine gender, nominative case, and singular number. That is, it takes a part of a word and converts it into a masculine singular noun. For example, in the word "BONUS", "BON-" means "good", so "BONUS" is a good thing. Another example is "LOCUS". The root "LOC-" means "place", as in "location" or "allocate". So "LOCUS" literally means "The place".The suffix "-US" is different from the suffix "-OUS", which actually takes a word and converts it into an adjective, such as "JOY" to "JOYOUS".Some words, like "Hummus", are not counterexamples because "hummus" is not the fusion of "HUMM-" and "-US". "Humm" has no meaning on its own.Try again. -us is not an English ending. It is Latin, and it is found on masculine, feminine and neuter nouns (e.g. carrus, manus and genus, respectively). Generally it indicates the nominative, but in some 3rd declension nouns like senatus -us, it is also the genitive, and of course neuter nominatives and accusatives are always the same.If you meant -ous, then the second paragraph above is correct.
All military units / branches use .mil as their domain suffix.