pro stands for productive and co stands for contrary
Con Safos was created in 1974.
Con Passionate was created in 2005.
Con Clifford died in 1961.
Con Collins died in 1937.
The word "con" can stand for many things. One of the most common is as the antonym for "pro", as in pros and cons. In this case, con means the negatives of the situation.
Acoustic Condition
It stands for Edison, as in Thomas Edison. Con Ed is the electric company in the northeast USA.
in a month con artist will finish juggerdome and then hell work on last stand 3
pro stands for productive and co stands for contrary
Because it is designed for outdoor use, this shed is waterproof and con stand up to the elements.
Con Con National was created in 1914.
It means "with." Chili con Queso is Chili with Cheese.
Moin well its con con's?
In the older version of Windows, which was DOS, a few words were reserved names to address a piece of hardware. You can't even rename a folder as "prn", "aux" and many others. This is because they all stand for output devices. "con" stand for 'console', "prn" stands for 'printer' and "aux" stands for 'auxillary'. Thus, you can't use these folder names if you are using dos because it will cause an error. Even if you open command prompt and type "con" without quotes and press enter, it will show:- "' ' is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable program or batch file." It will not even display the word "con".
Con means "together with"
Con- Against (This is incorrect... Contra- means against) Con- With or Together (from Latin) The common misconception is that Con (like in Pro or Con) is the same as the word prefix con-. A Con is a negative side to a point, or argument, and a Pro is an affirming side to the same point, or argument. These are two totally different uses of the three letters "con" with totally opposite meanings. The prefix means "With" and the stand-alone word means "Against." Be careful. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- This is the only way I knew how to comment... Sorry... Anyways, This is the only place that doesn't say it means against, but from Latin, clud, or clus, the root word, means to shut out. This wouldn't make sense with the word conclude, which, by this definition, means: to shut out together. Please help?