To carry across is to carry something from one side to the other.
There are two roots 'trans' meaning across and 'port' meaning carry.
trans = across port = carry tion = noun
The word 'ferry' comes from an Old English word meaning to carry by water.
to carry
"Renaissance" in French is literally "rebirth", and can carry the religious connotation of the English phrase "being born again". It is also, as in English, used to refer to the period in European history, roughly the 15th and 16th centuries, characterized by a renewed interest in the arts and literature of Antiquity.
Translatus = to carry acrossTranslate = to carry the meaning from one language across to another
The word "transfer" comes from the Latin word "transferre," which means "to carry or move across." It combines the prefix "trans-" meaning "across" with the verb "ferre" meaning "to carry."
There are two roots 'trans' meaning across and 'port' meaning carry.
"Trans" is a Latin prefix meaning "across", "beyond", or "into another space". It is found in words like "transport" (carry across), transmit (send across), transform (into a new form), transfer (carry across), transcend (climb beyond) and so on.
trans = across port = carry tion = noun
The term "metaphor" comes from the Greek word "metaphora," which means "transfer" or "to carry over." This reflects how a metaphor transfers the meaning of one word or phrase to another in order to create a comparison.
The word for "to carry across" is "transport."
La porta is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "the door." The feminine singular phrase also translates literally as "He (one, she) brings it" or "You carry it" according to English contexts. The pronunciation will be "la POR-ta" in Pisan Italian.
The root word for "transact" is "act," which means to do something or carry out an action. The prefix "trans-" means "across" or "beyond," so when combined with "act," it forms the word "transact," meaning to carry out a process or deal across or beyond a specific context.
Carry Me Across the Mountain was created in 2000.
Carry Me Across the Water was created in 2001.
Carry is the meaning of the root syllable 'port-'. An example of a Latin derivative is the verb 'portare', which is Latin for 'to carry'. An example of an English derivative is the adjective 'portable', which means 'easily carried'.