It means that a great deal of concern about the parts of words indicates as a sign that He/She/It have incomplete or little intellect, to put it simply
I can't get to ten but this is a start: Interrupt Corrupt Rupture Disrupt Erupt Irrupt Bankrupt Abrupt
abrupt. bankrupt. corrupt. disrupt. erupt. incorrupt. interrupt. irrupt. uncorrupt.
it is a modification of Middle French & Old Italian (which have their roots in Latin)The Middle French word banqueroute means bankruptcyThis comes from the Old Italian word bancarotta, from banca (bank) + rotta (broken)rotta, in turn, comes from the Latin word rupta,feminine of ruptus, past participle of rumpere(meaning "to break")
The word Schuco defines a German toy maker that was founded in 1912 by two men. This company went bankrupt in 1976, only to be reopened later in 1993.
"Rupt" is a Latin root that means "break." Some English words with this root include: "rupture," "interrupt," "abrupt," "disrupt," and "bankrupt."
It means lacking intelligence.
It means that is you care too much about how you put words together you were not smart enough to use them properly in the first place. Irony at its best. Haha
Can you be a teacher if you go bankrupt ?
Once you go bankrupt you are out of the game so you can go bankrupt once
No you can not go bankrupt on traffic tickets
We are not bankrupt yet but we are getting closer.
General Motors did go bankrupt.
yes you can bankrupt
No. Bankrupt is an adjective. The noun form is bankruptcy.
Absolutely, anyone can go bankrupt!
His business went to the dogs and he was declared bankrupt. He was unable to pay his debt and was declared bankrupt. His creditors got nothing as he was declared bankrupt.
While some people went bankrupt in the 1890s mini depression, many businesses went bankrupt during the Great Depression.She felt emotionally bankrupt because of her drug addiction.