An amice is a hood or cape, lined with grey fur, formerly worn by members of the clergy.
YES
Laurent Amice has written: 'Cap sur l'Euro, 1999-2002' -- subject(s): Monetary unions, Euro, Money, Monetary policy
Mis amigos, as Mi amigo, a
Nonne intellegis amice, eheu!
A Roman Collar.
no you cannot. coa has separate guidelines for registration
Semper amici.
E amice or Ed amice in the feminine or E amici or Ed amici in the masculine can be Italian equivalents of the English phrase "and friends."Specifically, the conjunction e and ed both mean "and." The difference between them is the letter d which traditionally is added when the immediately following word begins with a vowel. The feminine noun amice means "(female) friends" whereas the masculine noun amici means "(female and male) friends, (male) friends."The pronunciations will be "ey ah-MEE-tchey" or "ey-dah-MEE-tchey" in the feminine and "ey ah-MEE-tchee" or "ey-dah-MEE-tchee" in the masculine.
The rectangular piece of white linen worn beneath the alb is an 'amice', from the Latin word 'amictus' meaning cloak.
According to the American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, an amice is "a liturgical vestment consisting of an oblong piece of white linen worn around the neck and shoulders and partly under the alb." For more information about the amice on Answers.com, click on the Related Link. And to see a clear image of a priest wearing an amice, click on the Related Link to Google Images.
Vessels include: chalice, ciborium, cruets, finger basin, altar cloths, paten, pall, burse; vestments would include (for the priest) alb, amice, cincture, stole, maniple, chasuble.
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 2 words with the pattern A-IC-. That is, five letter words with 1st letter A and 3rd letter I and 4th letter C. In alphabetical order, they are: amice amici