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What is the translation of pounded by hail in Tagalog?

The translation of "pounded by hail" in Tagalog is "binayo ng bato-batong yelo."


What does ave centurion mean?

Hi or hail centurion Ave=hail or hi Centuriin=a roman ranking


Roman catholic devotion which includes the hail Mary salutation?

Angelus


What is the translation of the hale Mary prayer in Latin?

The "Hail Mary" prayer in Latin is translated as "Ave Maria."


What is the meaning of khairete in greek?

it's a traditional 'hail and farewell' word, literal translation 'rejoice.' the singular is khaire.


What is the Chinese translation of Hail Maria?

冰雹玛丽亚 (phonetically read Bīngbáo mǎlìyà)


What is the meaning of Ave in Roman?

Similar to the English word "hail" it was a form of greeting, much like hello.


What were the relationships between SS and victims?

The victims loved the ss i am telling you dis because i am Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla scisim de German gorhegano


What is the English translation of the hymn 'Salve Mater misericordiae'?

The English translation of the Latin greeting 'Salve, Regina' is the following: Hail, Queen. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'salve' means 'hail'; and 'regina' means 'queen'. According to classical Latin, the pronunciation is the following: SAHL-way ray-GEE-nah. According to liturgical Latin, the pronunciation is as follows: SAHL-vay ray-DJEE-nah.


When was Hail Hail the Celts Are Here created?

Hail Hail the Celts Are Here was created in 1961.


Does anyone remember an old tv commercial - with the line hail Caesar render some peanuts?

It was one of the original crazy Snickers commercials. "Hail Citizen - render some peanuts!" (snack vendor in Roman Colosseum tosses him a Snickers bar).


What is the word 'hail' when translated from English to Japanese?

Hail can have many meanings, such as "hailing" a taxi, "hail" that falls from the sky, "hail" as in "greet," etc. Though I'm not sure which context you're referring to, the hail that falls from the sky is 'arare.' "Hail" as in "Hail to the king!" is 'banzai.' "Hail" as in "greet" can be 'aisatsu suru.'