Past President was when the man or woman Stepped into the place when the original parent died. There was no divorce/remarriage so overstepping on SF or SM's part was impossible. Now however with remarriage; where there is no deceased the application is still the same.
That's why it's called Step.. and why it's called Parent. Because they are "replacing the POSITION, not the "Original Parent" of the deceased/or remarried parent.
mother's sister is mausi and her husband is mausa
The adverb in the sentence is "loudly." It describes how their mother called for them to come home.
Mère is the French word for "mother".
The formal word for sister is "sibling."
If you wanted to speak of brotherly/sisterly sentiments in French, the adjective "fraternel / fraternelle" would be used. They come from the Latin word fratria used to speak of siblings (boys and girls alike).Technically, a French adjective related to the word "soeur" (sister) is the word "sororel" which shares the same roots as "sister" or "sorority". Absolutely nobody will understand it.
mother's sister is mausi and her husband is mausa
Aunt
stepsister is one word.
Ä, Ö, and Ü.
a step-mother is une belle-mère in French. The same word is also used for a mother-in-law.
She would be just your sister's Mother-in-Law, but no special name exists for your relation to her.
mother, father, sister
I believe it is one word.
A sister-in-law is "une belle-sœur" in French. The same word is also used for a step-sister.
The term ina means mother, but also a mother's sister. A son might also call his mother mamá.
'une marâtre'
My sister and step-brother is an outcast in school.