Some examples of words that rarely occur initially in English include "queue," "rhythm," and "gnome." These words have unusual spellings or letter combinations that are not commonly found at the beginning of English words.
The English word from the Latin word "umquam" is "ever."
The word "ne'er" is not commonly used in contemporary English. It is an archaic or poetic term meaning "never."
The opposite of the Spanish word "siempre" is "nunca," which means "never" in English.
The word "incognito" comes from the Latin word "incognitus," which translates to "unknown" or "unrecognized." It was initially used in the 17th century to refer to a person traveling under a pseudonym or in disguise.
The past tense of the word "occur" is "occurred."
The voiced palatal-alveolar fricative, sometimes written "zh", that appears in azure, never occurs word-initially in native English words. It sometimes appears in loanwords from other languages however.
Aurium means "of the ears" in Latin. The word does not occur in English.
Well, if something did not occur, it never happened.
Never in Japanese is konrinzai or kesshite.
This is an English word. English words are never masculine or feminine (except him, her, he, she, etc.).
No. I have never heard of it before.
it never did...
The word "firstly", meaning "initially" or "finishing in the first position", is an adverb but and is not considered to be proper for use in formal English. "First" is the preferred word.
Nie or niemals
Never heard of such a word in English, to start with.
The English word from the Latin word "umquam" is "ever."
paligamy is not an English word. Maybe you mean polygamy. This word does not occur in the Bible either.