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
A chair you sit upon, and a table you eat upon.
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