El miedo termina donde comienza la fe.
No. "Miedo" is not an adjective here, but a noun. Literally you are saying " I have fear." It is normally translated as "I am afraid".
Temo el dañarle/te aun más. It means, "I fear hurting you even more."
fear in hebrew.
Cabo is the spanish word for cape. Not a superhero cape, but a geographical cape....such as cape fear. Cabo can also mean tip, end, handle etc. Rojo is the spanish word for the color red. So...it is hard to tell exactly what it means without knowing the speakers context. Kyle Fittro
Society's fear of science
fear, uncertainty and doubt
Fear: Something you'r afraid of. Example: I have a FEAR of darkness Faith: To hope believe in Example: I have faith in god Fear: Something you'r afraid of. Example: I have a FEAR of darkness Faith: To hope believe in Example: I have faith in god
fear is the the absence of love. faith transcends fear. have faith that all you are is love and you will transcend all religions.
faith is not fear.
faith is not fear.
put faith first and don´t let fear get in the way
The Spanish word for fear is "miedo."
The opposite of faith is fear.
Fear
Faith Over Fear - 2010 is rated/received certificates of: USA:PG-13
The Devil Wears Prada, Gwen Stacy, A Day to Remember and Chiodos are similar to In Fear and Faith.
(1)Teenage is when the child no more belongs to you, but belongs to peers. (2)Teenage is when parent rule stops and peer rule begins. (3)Teenage is when fear pressure ends and peer pressure begins.