The Latin word for "grateful" is "gratus." It conveys a sense of thankfulness and appreciation. In various contexts, "gratus" can also imply being pleasing or agreeable. The term is the root for many words related to gratitude in modern languages, such as "grateful" in English.
The English word "mother" and the Spanish word "madre" are cognates because they share a common Latin root.
account originates from the word "conter" (fr.: to count) the prefix a/ad means "to" (from Latin, through French)
The Latin root word "don" means "give." It is commonly found in English words like "donate" (to give) and "condone" (to give approval or pardon).
On Facebook when you see the word fr-fr and u try to understand it like i had done for a couple of days here is the definition the word fr-fr means Forreal - Forreal .
That would be Fr. Jermaine, who translated the Bible into the Latin Vulgate, circa 400 CE.
Fr
You are probably thinking of the Anglo-Norman French word magnete.Magnet from Latin. magnes, magnet-, from Greek magnēs lithos 'lodestone', prob. influenced by Anglo-Norman Fr. magnete.
1852, "shed for carriages," from Fr. hangar"shed," from M.Fr. hanghart, perhaps an alteration of M.Du. *ham-gaerd "enclosure near a house," or from M.L. angarium "shed in which horses are shod." Sense of "covered shed for airplanes" first recorded in Eng. 1902, from Fr. use in that sense.So if you believe the derivation from angarium,Latin.
form
fable Fabulous has the sense 'known through fable': from Fr. fabuleux or L. fabulosus 'celebrated in fable', from fabula.
'FR' by itself is not a valid two-letter scrabble word according to the official dictionary.
word is that only 100 she devil FR's were made. you can still find the she devil on sites with out the FR but your best chance at finding a she devil FR is by checking ebay everyday.