greek language
The English name for the recorder may come from a middle English use of the word record meaning, "to practice a piece of music"
Although many attribute an Arabic origin, an Anglo-Saxon etymology is the correct one. SHERIFF - Old English. "A sheriff is etymologically a 'shire-reeve,' that is a 'county official.' The term was compounded in the old English period from 'scir,' ancestor of modern English 'shire,' and 'gerefa,' 'local official, a word based on 'rof' 'assembly' which survives as the historical term 'reeve.' It was used for the 'monarch's representative in a county.'" From the "Dictionary of Word Origins: the Histories of More Than 8,000 English-Language Words" by John Ayto (Arcade Publishing, New York, 1990).
who invented the recorder. The recorder was invented in the Middle Ages around the 13th century. No one person is responsible for it.
Karaoke is a Japanese word.
The word Tennesse means the River in the Cherokee Language.
The word sheriff is stressed on the first syllable. (sher-iff)
The stress is on the first syllable in "sheriff", "sher-."
The stress is on the first syllable of language.
Our sheriff is right here.
Yes, language is stressed on the first syllable.
The word sheriff does not have an opposite. Not all words do.
No. If the sheriff possesses something, it is the sheriff's with an apostrophe before the "s."
enregistreur
hello
When an infant speaks his or her first word, this is an example of a milestone in language development. It signals the beginning of expressive language skills and language comprehension.
Yes the word language has a stressed syllable. Language is stressed on the first syllable.
Camcorder. Cam Corder CAMera reCORDER So its the shortened version of "Camera Recorder"