stallions, stables, stripe, star, ship, swayback....those are all terms :-)
The Hindi word for new beginnings is "नया आरंभ" (naya arambh).
Maris Monitz Rodgon has written: 'An investigation into the nature of holophrases and the beginnings of combinatorial speech' 'Single-word usage, cognitive development, and the beginnings of combinatorial speech' -- subject(s): Language acquisition, Psycholinguistics
A plural noun ending with an s is possessive if it has an apostrophe after the s (s'), for example, horses-horses' or parents-parents'.A plural noun that does not end with an s has an apostrophe s ('s) added to the end of the word, for example, children-children's or teeth-teeth's.
Yes, it is made up of two different words, which make it into one word, spelled 's-e-a-h-o-r-s-e'.
αρχές (arches) [ ar- ch : sounds like h as in house,there is no ''k'' sound in it - es :clear s sound ]
No it isn't, but it is added to the beginnings of words as a prefix to negate the word.
principles, beginnings
There are 2 syllables in the word "Horses".
νέα ξεκινήματα or néa xekiní̱mata
Two are ancestry and heritage.
Genesis - the Book of - is the Book of Beginnings.
No. Horses' is correct I believe.