-adjective used to describe something
aged elderly not young not modern experienced worn out
The word "old" is an adjective. It is used to describe the age of a person or object.
The old French word for romance is "romans." It referred to a type of medieval narrative verse or prose dealing with knights, chivalry, and courtly love.
The African Luhya word for the English word 'old' is Eshikoofu".
The Old English word for "no" is "nฤn."
"Langue" is the Old French word for tongue.
An old-fashioned word for "tell" is "recount."
Type your answer here... coat
Type your answer here... from old egypt... i think
Historical. Reffering to old british police.
About 2 centuries when the British invented and nicknamed the word from a new type of food they called "Gelatin.
then can word at the mall
Reo
The old French word for romance is "romans." It referred to a type of medieval narrative verse or prose dealing with knights, chivalry, and courtly love.
It is an old word for a type of drum. There are different explanations for the origins of it. It is an instrument, a type of frame drum. See the link below for a photo of it.
The word 'ope' was not used in Old English, and is not used much in modern English. It is a type of pseudo-word used for 'open' in some redone versions of old literature.
The word "of" is a preposition.
There are a number of old Europeans words from Old German, Gothic, Old Norse, Old English and others which referred to the area as a 'mirror' and a type of 'cloud' as a 'shadow' or something that has' covered or concealed' or best of all 'the upper regions'. The Old Norse word also referred to the sky as 'transparent skin'
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