Si~Sit~Prudentia
The use is to have something to sit on.For You To Sit On When You're Tired of Standing!to sit on? or have i not got your questionIt's Easy, just sit on it.STEP BY STEP1. take butt and get a chair. ( you know the thing you sit on)2. put butt on chair3. u are now sitting.
Catseye's are reflectors that sit in the middle of the road and light up at night.
Most polite people would sit on their posterior.
Lever
Sit where 2 can see you
The correct form of the quotation, which comes from the Georgics of Virgil (P. Vergilius Maro) is fato prudentia major. By itself, this can be translated "understanding [is] greater than fate", taking fato as the ablative of comparison.In context, though, it is apparent that fato is in fact an ablative of cause:haud equidem credo, quia sit divinitus illisingenium aut rerum fato prudentia majornot, indeed, that I think that they have from heavena natural wit, or by fate a greater understanding of things
Past tense: I sat. Present tense: I sit. Future tense: I will sit.
The plural form of sit-in is sit-ins.
a sit in is when you sit in a chair
The future tense is will sit.
The future tense of "sit" is "will sit."
Sit, or to sit, is a verb.
The infinitive form of "sit" is "to sit."
No, the word 'sit' is a verb: sit, sits, sitting, sat.Example: You can sit beside me.
Sedere (is the verb to sit) Sit as in sit down is "Siediti"
I sit. He sat. He and I were sitting.
Sit is lingkud