The word amen is an interjection meaning 'so be it', often used at the end of a prayer. An interjection is a word used to express something in addition to the sentence itself. Some examples are, 'hello' or 'hi', expressing greeting; 'ow' or 'ouch', expressing pain; and 'uh' or 'umm' expressing hesitation.
An acronym is used to abbreviate a phrase, not a single word. For example, SF for San Francisco (or science fiction), BART for Bay Area Rapid Transit, NATO for North Atlantic Treaty Organization. You will note that each word of the phrase being turned into an acronym is represented by its first letter. If you had a phrase that included the word prayer, then prayer would be indicated by a capital letter P. So for example, the Excellent Prayer Group would become EPG. The Fundamentalist Prayer Foundation would become the FPF. But prayer by itself does not call for an acronym.
I do not think that hyperfusion is a real complete word so in accordance to that, it would not have a meaning at all.
Asunder. It has the words "as" and "under", so it is made up of two individual words, making it a compound word.
Another word for prison guard is jail guard Its so easy
Prayer is the verbal form of worship. So prayer is only meaningless when the person does not find meaning in prayer.
In Christianity, the word "amen" is frequently used to conclude a prayer; it is a Hebrew word of affirmation which means "truly it is so" or "so be it"
English is fairly permissive about what is allowed as a word. There is a word "angst," and there is an ending "-ing." The problem is that "angst" is a noun (meaning dread or anxiety) and the "-ing" ending usually goes with verbs. Even so, the meaning is clear, so it seems to be a word.
It is a word usually said after prayer (dua). Aamin means 'So be it' or 'jaisa chaho vaisa hi ho jaye'.
"Insect killer" is the meaning of the English word "insecticide."Specifically, the ending "-cide" refers to the deliberate ending of a life. It comes from the Latin suffix -cidium. The original meaning of the Latin suffix and therefore of the English language ending is the "act of killing."
An ending where what you think will happen, doesn't. So it's unexpected
words ending in ar do not all have the same meaning. a simple example is compare the meaning of the words 'altar' and 'star.' Basically,you need to specify a word you want the meaning for. So i'd advice you to re-ask this question because at the moment it is unanswerable.
There is no word wintuk in any of the Iroquoian languages. The name is a combination of English winter and the Inupiak word ending -uk - so it is a fake, invented word used as the name of a circus show.
There is no word wintuk in any of the Iroquoian languages. The name is a combination of English winter and the Inupiak word ending -uk - so it is a fake, invented word used as the name of a circus show.
The word gitanjoli is a composed from "git", song, and "anjoli", offering, and thus means - "An offering of songs"; but the word for offering, anjoli, has a strong devotional connotation, so the title may also be interpreted as "prayer offering of song".
Do, no, so, to
The word amen means 'so it is', or 'so be it'.