No, but it is slightly informal, not to be used in formal writing except as dialogue.
"Jai Ho" is a Hindi phrase that means "let victory prevail" or "hail victory." It is not specifically a Tamil phrase.
Some words are easy like ail, bail, fail, hail, mail, nail, pail, prevail, quail, rail, sail, tail, trail, vail (archaic), and wail.
Hail- to rain down with chunks of ice Hail- to cheer or greet
The homonym for "hale" is "hail." "Hail" can refer to frozen rain that falls in pellets or an expression of greeting.
The spelling lam is a slang word, used in the phrase "on the lam" (fleeing). It is also an archaic verb meaning to beat or thrash.The correct spelling for a baby sheep is a lamb.
In the phrase "Hail Mary," the word "hail" is a greeting or salutation, similar to saying "hello" or "greetings." It is used to show respect and honor to Mary, the mother of Jesus, in the Catholic prayer known as the Hail Mary.
An archaist is a person who studies archaic things, or a person who uses archaic turns of phrase in language.
The phrase "Hail Mary, full of grace" is the beginning of a prayer called the Hail Mary in the Catholic tradition. It is a greeting to the Virgin Mary, acknowledging her as full of grace and asking for her intercession.
do not really know, other that it is an archaic upper class phrase, obviously meaning the best
It is 'Hail the Queen of Peace" in Bosnian.
Yes, although somewhat archaic. "Instead" is a shortening of this phrase.
The phrase "although this is good" would be correct modern English; the phrase "although this be good" is archaic.
Sieg Heil is a German phrase, which means Hail Victory
No, it is passive.There are two clues:was pelted -- this is be + past participle this is the form of the verb in passive sentencesby hail -- passive sentences often end in by + noun (or noun phrase)
Just an archaic way of expressing that someone died. to die suddenly and unexpectedly> "She just "up and died"
what is the religion of the archaic
archaic ARE>>K>>IK