take on
Stand is the opposite of "sit" and has a short vowel sound.
The Krio word "sidon" means to sit or sit down in English.
The prefix for "sit" is "re-." The prefix "re-" means "again" or "back," indicating a repeated action or a return to a previous state. When added to "sit," it forms the word "resit," which means to sit an exam or test again.
House is the English meaning for the Kikuyu word Nyumba.
No, "sit" is a verb. It is an action word that describes the act of resting on one's buttocks.
The word sit means to rest on one's bottom without necessarily lying down whereas a seat is an object to sit on.
Let it be itself is the English equivalent of 'sit ipse'. In the word by word translation, the verb 'sit' means 'let [he/she/it] be'. The reflexive 'ipse' means 'itself'.
The word "cancel" is the opposite of sit, in the sense of convene.
Stand is the opposite of "sit" and has a short vowel sound.
The Krio word "sidon" means to sit or sit down in English.
The word sit has one syllable.
it means to sit or sedate
The prefix for "sit" is "re-." The prefix "re-" means "again" or "back," indicating a repeated action or a return to a previous state. When added to "sit," it forms the word "resit," which means to sit an exam or test again.
It means don't just sit there thinking about it, do it! Nike it, means-"Just Do It"
Stand.
House is the English meaning for the Kikuyu word Nyumba.
It could be either. 'Sit!' as an imperative form of the verb to sit (an instruction given to a dog, for example) is a sentence in its own right. Sit can also be just one word in a sentence, for example 'I asked you not to sit there.' In that case it would be a fragment.