Type your answer here... the truth about the obey the walrus video that if you watched it you die in four days
The command form of "obey" in Spanish, in other words, if you were TELLING someone to obey, is, "Obedezca." It is pronounced, "Oh-bay-DASE-cah." Sites such as learn-spanish.co.il provide audio pronunciations of many common Spanish words.
Vac is Latin
Ego IS a Latin word. It is the Latin for I.
solus is the latin word for alone ( it is a latin root and can have endings added to it )
The word has Latin origins 'oboedire' meaning to pay attention to or to listen to. This Latin word passed into Old French as 'obeir' to obey. The word then passed into English as 'obey' meaning to carry out instructions or orders, or to comply with demands.
Writ of Mandamus.
A religion/code of conduct that the Latin Kings (gang) follow and obey.
The verb is merely, obey. I obey, you obey, he, she, it obeys. One may be obedient to someone, but one does not "obey to" someone.
Obey is a verb. Obey means "to do as told".Example:Soldiers should obey orders.
Obey is present tense. I/We/You/They obey He/She/It obeys
There is dis obey the prefix here is dis because it comes right before obey. You can use Re obey because you can obey someone another time for the same thing maybe. But everybody knows that you can use dis obey and maybe re obey Onother person: Prefixes can be dis-obey
Yes, obey the laws and obey them well.
Obey Kelly
Fido means, literally "I obey". In Latin the root form of the word is the first person, the "I do this" form of the word, so Fido is the word that fidus "comes from". Fidus essentially means Truth, but it is not objective truth as in "the sky is blue", rather spiritual truth as in "the gods will it, and I will obey".Thus your little dog's name doesn't just say he will fetch when you want him to, it says he is a morally good dog, and that he obeys you as you obey the gods, as do the sun and moon.Additionally, along these same lines, "semper fidelis" does not really mean "Always true" as they tell the Marines. A fitting motto, indeed! It really means "We will always obey!"
extension to obey
The word "obey" is a verb (obey, obeys, obeying, obeyed), there is no plural.