"I do," "I make," or "I accomplish" Contextually it often has different meanings.
literally "every year you are in peace" but contextually "may you be in peace every year"
A bygone age means a time in the past. Usually it is used contextually to refer a better time that a person remembers.
Yujin ni, or 友人にmeans: To/for a friend. 友人=friend に=to/ for(contextually)
A bygone age means a time in the past. Usually it is used contextually to refer a better time that a person remembers.
Contextually she feels she has lost Sherry and Holly, who she loved to work with and appreciated their style of support, but now working with Kevin feels like her job just got exponentially harder.
Taking a quick look at something means to read quickly or scan a document. This is the most common meaning of this phrase although contextually it can mean many other things.
There is very little difference between "I was probably" and "I probably was." Contextually, they mean the same thing, but different rhyming schemes could be used with one or the other.
the act of thinking and calulating for the situation and understand the situation
Not sure on buddy, but friend (which is contextually similar) is ffrind. Ffrindau is the plural.
This could only be answered contextually. Do you mean the state history? The question is in Native American Spirituality, so do you mean how the Connecticut river, also known at the Long River, impacted native cultures?
You mean what you were thinking, right? and no, I can't