The word 'hayate' means "squall/hurricane."
Ureire is the Kikuyu word for the English word you ate.
Kare WA de hataraite iru. (Carry WA day ha-tar-ate ay-ru)
ate? I think : il cane mi ha mangiato i compiti
ich aß is the translation in German. It is translated from English to German. German is mostly spoken in the European countries.
It's actually a greek word, akris - it means locust the insect.
i ate- comí you ate-comió we ate- comimos each person has a different ending
The Latin word "et" means "and." In some dialects of English, et means "ate" or "eaten".
This is not a Japanese phrase.
tale, late, at, let, ale, eat, ate
eat and ate
THE COXCOMB ATE THE COCKS. (: (i used this word for my english project, and my teacher said this was the best sentence she's seen for this word. USE IT!)
The difference is under the rules of English grammar, "I have eaten" (the past participle form of the word "eat") makes sense, while "I have ate" (the simple past tense form of the word "eat) does not. "I ate" does make sense, however, and it has the same meaning as "I have eaten".