In reality; in truth; in fact; verily; truly; -- used in a variety of sense. Esp.: (a) Denoting emphasis; as, indeed it is so. (b) Denoting concession or admission; as, indeed, you are right. (c) Denoting surprise; as, indeed, is it you? Its meaning is not intrinsic or fixed, but depends largely on the form of expression which it accompanies.
Indeed
Yes indeed, caterpillars go through metamorphosis. Indeed in my dictionary, that is an example given of the meaning of that word.
Difficult question indeed... It should mean...little,I suppose.
A panda has a spine to support it's body, meaning is is indeed vertabrate.
In Arabic Jahanzeb means beautiful and indeed it's a beautiful name :)
90 proof = 45 % alcohol. A very strong drink indeed.
sexual intercouser, my friends sexual incourse indeed =]
Yes, "in-" is a prefix in the word "indeed." In linguistics, a prefix is an affix which is placed before the stem of a word. In this case, "in-" is added to the word "deed" to change its meaning to emphasize the truth or certainty of something.
Edepol is a Latin exclamation, meaning "by Pollux". It meant indeed, it's true, no kidding, etc.
Yes it is indeed a muslim name and the meaning of the name if High, Sublime. The origin of the name is Arabic.
I'm not quite sure what you are asking here but the Netherlands has a 3.6% unemployment rate meaning that there are indeed jobs in The Netherlands.
You can indeed smash gold. This is because gold is a precious metal that is very malleable meaning it can be bent or broken easily.