ins
One option is the word briefly.
You have to specify what "this one' is.
Not ordinarily. The idiomatic phrase means "in authority" or "in command."
Don't know about one word, but a two word phrase that means exactly the same as "weigh" is "ascertain displacement".
This phrase means that one is honest, trustworthy, that they can keep a promise, their "word is as good as gold."
The phrase you are looking for is "raison d'etre," French for "reason for being."
The phrase 'take advantage' means to 'receive benefit from one's mistake's.' The French equivalent of the English phrase would be the word 'profiter.'
"Alternate word" is a noun-phrase that is kind of a synonym for the word "synonym. There is no one exact word that means the same as synonym.
There's no one-on-one Latin equivalent to the English word 'jungle'. Instead, the Latin writer needs to use a phrase that describes the jungle vegetation. The phrase is Loca virgultis obsita. In the word-by-word translation, the noun 'loca' means 'place'. The noun 'virgultis' means 'brushwood, copse, thicket'. The participle 'obsita' means 'covered with'.
Yes. You see, yes or yeah is a one-word phrase.
The phrase '[c'est] quoi une vie' means what [is] one life. In the word-by-word translation, the pronoun 'quoi' means 'what'. The indefinite article 'une' means 'a, an, one'. And the noun 'vie' means 'life'.
The word "phrase" has one syllable.